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The Westmount examiner
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jeudi 26 janvier 1984
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[" ®@ 4 + y f [3 Ville Marie: Plan seen as threat to English services By JOAN CAPREOL The Quebec government, in the process of reorganizing the social services organizations, would transfer staff and funds from the social service centres to the local community service centres (CLSCs).For Ville Marie Social Service Centre, which serves the anglo population, this would mean some $6.7 million of its $19-million budget and 40 percent of its 600 staff members would be transferred to various CLSCs.\u201cVille Marie is particularly concerned that this plan, by dividing and fragmenting services, would seriously handicap the ability of anglophones to receive social services,\u201d said Frances Boylston, chairman of the board, during an interview.\u201cThe principle adopted by the board of Ville Marie has been that anglophones have access to social services in their language and that we maintain this principle must be respected regardless of structural changes between the CLSCs and the social service centres.\u201cTherefore we will be pursuing, with the ministry of social affairs, ways to ensure this.\u201d Ville Marie's main concern, she said, is that the quality of services Thieves have sweet tooth Candies and cigars made sweet stesls from shops in, Westmount Square and Alexis Nihon Plaza during the past week, according to police reports.Thieves took three boxes of chocolates from the Laura Secord store in Westmount Square overnight Wednesday-Thursday and the following night made off with $900-worth of candies, cigars and gum from the United Cigar Store in the plaza.No signs of forced entry were found in either incident.Someone managed to open a door at the chocolate shop, which appeared to have been left unlocked, police said.À set of footprints was left behind, but chocolates worth $50 were discovered missing.On arrival at work Friday morning, an employee of the cigar store found one of two doors unlocked.Many boxes and packages of cigars were gone, as well as chocolate bars and gum.to beneficiaries not suffer due to administrative changes.\u2018We also fear that a transfer of services without proper planning and consultation could so fragment services to English-speaking people that the very mission of Ville Marie would be put in jeopardy.\u201d Mrs.Boylston said.\u2018We are encouraged by new reports attributed to Deputy Social Affairs Minister Jean- Claude Deschenes that he would be willing to consider exempting Ville Marie from some of the reorganization.May be premature \u201cHowever, given that Ville Marie had not yet received official confirmation of this statement, this encouragement may be premature.\u201d In social services, there are two types of organizations which serve the population.Both of them come from the 1970 legislation.One group is the social service centres, of which there are 14 in Quebec.In Montreal, three social service agencies were created and thus the legislation respected the ethnic diversity of Montreal.The three are Ville Marie, which serves mainly the anglophones, Montréal Métropolitain, which serves francophones, and Jewish Family Services.The second big organization is the CLSCs and there are some 100 in the province, largely outside Continued on page seven Milk truck catches fire A fire which broke out in a milk truck early Wednesday morning at the corner of Claremont avenue and Sherbrooke street was believed caused by a short circuit, fire officials report.Damage to the vehicle was estimated at about $800 but it was not known whether the dairy products had been affected.The fire was spotted about 6:30 am by Public Safety Officer R.Barba on his way home.He called the fire department from firebox 245 and waited for firemen to attend.The fire in the motor compartment was extinguished with a 1%-inch line.À second line was laid as a precaution.Whatever the weather.ltalian oJ ~ 4 By Capt.Eric Neal January 26 to 31 A little milder everywhere, even a partial thaw in the south with freezing drizzle, snow rains and bright intervals.This is the time we often have glaze ice storms.Snowfall during January could exceed 75 cm divided nearly equally over each week.Cooling gradually 5 toward the end of the week to begin February = 2 at temperatures well below zero, and continu- = * ing light snowfall.+ = Open seven days a week = \u2018until midnight = : > NEXT WEEK'S WEATHER J,LY LICENSED - Avesive | ; 932-7777 = + \\ SER Making all of Westmount y your home Vol.LVI, No.4 Westmount PQ, H3Z 2Y8, Thursday, January 26, 1984 BABY MAKES FOUR: Though she may not know it, little Marie Anne was the first Westmount baby of 1984.The happy parents; recipients of prizes from various Westmount merchants in THE EXAMINER's annual first baby contest, are Dr.Aléjandro Grassino and Dr.lize Kraulis.Marie Anne also i is a new sister for Alexander who will be six years old in February.Typical of the Canadian mosaic.Dr.Grassino is eriginally \u201cfrom Argentina.He has besn in Canada for 15 years and holds a rebeatch position in pulmonary physiology at McGiH University and is an associate professor of medicine at the University of Montreal, Dr.Kraulis is of Latvian origin.Her parents arrived in Canada, via Sweden, in 1951.She is a biochemist at the Montreal General Hospital and is doing research in female hormones and pre-menstrual tension.The couple met and married in Montreal.1983 police report : Cuts in crime, overtime have Groulx doubly pleased Westmount's MUC police achieved \u201cmore with less\" during 1983 and met most objectives for the year, according to station 23's annual report.Crime in Westmount dropped 11 percent, the solution rate rose to nearly 40 percent and, at the same time, costly overtime pay was pared by 16.1 percent.Since salaries account for 96 percent of the $4 million budget allocated to station 23, overtime is considered a significant feature.\u201cIf we look at the big decrease in crime and overtime in the past two years, then I'm doubly pleas- Building permits.13 Classified advertising .26 Editorials/We Say.1 À Education.22-25 Entertainments and eating.14-15 Examining the Files.6 Fire calls for the week .\u2026.3 Home improvement.18 Joan Capréol\u2019s profile._ .6 Judy Yelon's cartoon.5 Official Notice Board \u2026 1.02 Our MPsays.-.5 Our MNA says.La 5 Professional cards.13 Realty .TB Religious news.FU 12 Social and women's interests.16-21 Sports and recreation .31 By LAUREEN SWEENEY ed with the results,\u201d points out Director Michel Groulx, commanding officer.Since 1981, Westmount\u2019s crime has fallen more than 22 percent and overtime expenses have been trimmed by 30 percent.Crime is also down in the St.Henri sector of the station's operation.Six crimes a day Although police responded to about 13,000 emergency calls for all types of help in Westmount alone during the past year, there were only 2,328 classified as criminal incidents.This translates into roughly six per day.Almost all aspects of crime in Westmount were down except for a seven percent increase in breaking and entering, which had been projected for the year, he said (see \u201cSo poodles bathersd you # little bit.Now, was that nice to do?\" separate story).Dir.Groulx attributes the results largely to crime prevention campaigns and to more efficient use and concentration of personnel.Concentration of police patrols and the addition of detectives to the uniformed teams has had rewarding results.The 1984 labor contract, he says, will provide for even greater flexibility in the use of the men.Dir.Groulx praised the work of the 116 local MUC men, noting that the station had operated with three fewer detectives during 1983 as well as with a number of positions vacant for periods of several months.Station 23, as a whole, was able to increase its solution rate from 34 percent to 36.5 percent although the solution rate of Westmount crimes alone stood at 39.4 percent.The year's objective to concentrate on patrols and reduce robberies was relatively successful, Continued on page 10 Damper closed Firefighters were called to 553 Grosvenor avenue last Thursday for smoke in the house.The problem was caused when the fireplace was lit without opening the damper, fire officials said.| IT] 2 - The Westmount Examiner, Thursday, City of Westmount (OMR ee CT ELT) Next Scheduled City Council Meeting Mon., Feb.6, 8:00 pm.Regular monthly meeting.CITY HALL 4333 Sherbrooke Street West WESTMOUNT, PQ H3Z 935-8531 1E2 Monday-Friday, 8:30 am to 4:30 pm Fire (business cails) 19 Stanton St.Police (business calls) 21 Stanton St.Municipal Court, 21 Stanton St.Saturdays, Sundays and holidays Victoria Hall, 4626 Sherbrooke St.Municipal Yard, 14 Bethune St.Light Department.Glen Rd.EMERG Fire Police 934-2121 935-2456 Ambulance Public Security 935-9696 934-2223 935-3528 935-2066 935-8037 935-8218 ENCIES 842-4242 935-1777 Police cruiser collides with Westmount Buick It's been an unlucky period this month for police vehicles in West- mount, the most recent of several \u201cfreak\u201d accidents being probably the thost spectacular.Patrol car 23- vas on its fray back>to station 23 Tuesda Nast week with three suspects in the back seat when it collided with a car at de Maisonneuve boulevard and Greene avenue, police report.Constables René Richard and Nelson Marshall had been called into the Atwater Métro station at 11:49 am to remove three young men aged 14, 16 and 18 for loitering.The trio were put into a police car, later to be questioned at station 23.The car headed west along de Maisonneuve boulevard, but as it approached Greene avenue, the three began \u2018\u2018creating a ruckus,\u201d police said.In the throes of attempting to control them, the patrol car collided in the intersection hitting a grey Buick driven by a West- mount resident.Police said the driver of the patrol car had attempted to stop suddenly, but had difficulty on slippery streets.Damage to both vehicles was estimated at more than $500 and the two constables were taken to the Montreal General Hospital with \u201cslight\u201d injuries.The driver of the other car was reportedly unhurt.In the meantime, another patrol car saw the three suspects safely delivered to station 23.All three MORE THAN JUST A BALLOON STORE 481-1128 344A Victoria Avenue near Sherbrooke lived in St.Henri, police said.A caller phoned THE EXAMINER to report the incident, describing it as a \u2018\u2018rather spectacular accident.\u201d At the same time, police themselves were in the process of relaying the news.The ambulance, vehicle 23-15, was involved in two accidents recently.It was hit in the rear on Sherbrooke street late in December and again Jan.13 when a motorist opened his car door into the side of the vehicle.Officer's car hit at station Constable Léo Collette, who played the part of the clown at the police Christmas party, wasn't clowning around much this week.His 1983 Mazda became the victim of a hit-and-run accident Monday morning last week when it was parked outside the police station on Stanton street.More than $500 damage was caused by the impact which pushed the rear of the car up onto the sidewalk, police report.Police said that tire marks indicated the car probably had been struck by a truck.Streaks of bright blue paint were left behind on the left rear bumper of the silver-colored car.The damage was discovered by public safety officer Richard Turley who at first thought the car had been badly parked.Hit-and-run licence noted A hit-and-run accident Saturday afternoon at the Timmins- Campbell garage, 4428 St.Catherine street.was reported to have caused up to $500 damage to a Westmount car.Police said the accident occurred when a green car backed out of the garage into the right front fender of a grey Renault that was gassing up at the pumps about 5 pm.The victim lives on St.Catherine street.The licence number of the offending vehicle was taken.Two fire reports concerning unsafe fireplaces during the past week should serve as a warning to Westmount residents to check out chimneys and fireplaces carefully before using them.In one incident, at 1112 Greene avenue, a joist under the fireplace was set on fire but firefighters arrived in time to prevent it spreading further into the structure.The other case was a \u201cfreak\u201d situation which developed after a workman mistakenly covered over the chimney at 714 Gros- venor avenue, unbeknown to the resident who used the fireplace, according to fire officials.In that case, the smoke went up the chimney flue and, when it could not dissipate into the air, went down the flue of the adjoining house at 716, where firemen were called to investigate the mystery smoke.Officials said the workman was to cover over only the chimney at 716 where water had been causing a problem.He apparently covered both chimneys at the same time.The fire, which was discovered Monday morning in the house on By LAUREEN SWEENEY Greene avenue, caused a reported $2,000 damage.Fire officials said the fireplace had been used the night before by residents who were under the impression it was intended for burning wood.They had moved in after the house had been renovated and gas pipes removed from what was described as \u2018\u2018an old-type gas fireplace.\u201d As a result, the hearth was not designed to withstand the heat of a wood-burning fire and a 3- by 10-inch joist underneath started Security unit checks crash A minor accident at Sherbrooke street and Lansdowne avenue Friday afternoon was brought to the attention of a Public Security Unit patrol about 3:05 pm.No injuries were reported.One car had apparently scraped another while both were driving west, causing only slight damage.January 26, 1984 Firemen called to unsafe fireplaces to smoulder.Residents found smoke coming up from the walls the morning | after the fireplace had been used and called firefighters to the scene.Firemen used a heat scanner to detect the source of the smoke and opened a wall and ceiling of the finished playroom underneath, found the smouldering joist and extinguished the fire with a water extinguisher and a 1'%-inch hose.Cupboards and another wall also were opened up to check for possible extension of the fire, Firemen seen leaving the sce were covered in plaster dust.® Case closed A stolen briefcase was found Monday last week before it was reported lost, police said.A St.Laurent man discovered the briefcase in the lane south of Prince Albert avenue at 10 am.It had been taken from a Cadillac Eldorado parked Jan.12 in front of 349 Victoria avenue.The car had been left unlocked.HELPING YOU IN BOTH OFFICIAL LANGUAGES Take advantage of the services provided by the Government of Canada in the official language of your choice.To obtain a copy of the directory of offices providing services in both official languages, mail this coupon to the adjoining address: 6«5 Presse forward the directory SERVING YOU IN BOTH OFFICIAL Official Languages Branch Treasury Board of Canada Place Bell Canada Ottawa, Ontario K1A ORS my | LANGUAGES Canadi | ™™ Address City ie Treasury Board Conseil gu Tresor of Canada du Canad Hon Herb Gray L'hon Herd Gray President Président Postal Code me ee > ça EE L II Central Trust 933-1122 FINANCIAL SERVICES WITH CONVENIENT HOURS 4825 Sherbrooke St.W.Ladd Ll where were they going?| The following calls were answered by the Westmount Fire Brigade during the past week: Jan.17 11:16 am: 4867 Sherbrooke, Apt.4, first responder call not needed, Urgences Santé on scene; 2:49 pm: 7063 Côte St.Luc, code 3 automatic mutual aid to Côte St.Luc cancelled at 2:55 pm; 11:10 pm: 716 Grosvenor, chimney problem (see story); Jan.18 3:09 pm: In front of 1326 Greene, first responder unit for cardiac arrest (see story); 10:29 pm: 4462 Sherbrooke, strange odor; Jan.19 6:33 am: Claremont and de Maison- neuve, milk truck on fire (see story); 9:01 pm: 553 Grosvenor, fireplace smoking (see story); 11:34 pm: 201 Metcalfe, Apt.705, burnt food (see story); Jan.20 4:26 am: 5320 Macdonald, code 3 automatic mutual aid to Céte St.Luc, cancelled at 4:35 am; 11:11 am: 4646 Sherbrooke, Apt.116, woman taken to RVH by Urgences Santé, 11:51 pm: 694 Aberdeen, burnt papers from chimney (see story); Jan.21 4:43 pm: 4300 de Maisonneuve, Apt.724 east, first responder unit, woman taken to JGH by Urgences Santé; Jan.22 6:54 am: 39 Holton, smoke detector beeping (see story); 3:32 pm: King George Park, first responder unit, man taken to RMH by Urgences Santé (see story); 6:00 pm: 225 Melville, Apt.9, smoke detector ringing (see story); 8:15 pm: Victoria and Somerville, smoke scare (see story); 10:35 pm: 5795 Caldwell, code 3 automatic mutual aid to Céte St.Luc; Jan.23 8:31 am: 1112 Greene, fire in house (see story); 10:48 am: Alexis Nihon Plaza, steam scare (see story); 12:00 noon: 95 Céte St.Antoine, Selwyn House School, first responder call cancelled en route; 4:23 pm: 4867 Sherbrooke, Apt.4, first se unit not needed, Urgences anté on scene.Correction THE WESTMOUNT EXAMINER has been advised that Harold Bedoukian, mentioned last week in a story about a course to be given on Oriental rugs, is one of several founders of the Montreal Oriental Rug Society.Anthony\u2019s VARIETY STORE post office ® greeting cards Open 8 am to 8 pm, closed Sundays 4500 St.Catherine W.at Abbott MUCTC BUS TICKETS Thursday, January 26, 1984 - 3 Young ECS journalists get hot tips from mayor By LAUREEN SWEENEY Mayor Brian Gallery reflected on his first two months in office Monday, singling out taxes and parking as two problems in the city.He said the job of mayor took more time than he realized and that it was \u201cvery hard'\u2019 for him to know if he would seek a second term in office.The \u201ctrade secrets\u201d were revealed in a candid interview at city hall with two 11-year-old West- Book donations not assessed by library People donating books to the Westmount library should think twice if they want a tax receipt for the donation.After city council agreed last week the library could give out tax receipts, the question arose as to whether it could actually assess the books.As it turns out, the library is doubtful as to its ability to do this.\u201cWe just invited their (council\u2019s) opinion on it,\u2019 Chief Librarian Rosemary Lydon told THE WESTMOUNT EXAMINER.\u201cWe're happy to receive donations, but we're not in a position in terms of time or legality to assess them.\u201d Miss Lydon said the library receives hundreds of donated books every year, but that few of them are worth enough to actually merit their evaluation for tax purposes.Even for more valuable books, two factors make such assessments difficult for the library to do.First, there is the problem of the added work it would put on the librarians.\u201cThis is a very time-consuming process,\u2019 said Miss Lydon, noting the staff was already busy running the library.\u201cWe just don\u2019t have the time to work out the values.\u201d The other question is whether the library staff would be legally qualified to carry out the work.\u2018\u2018We\u2019re not experts on this matter.I'm not sure to what extent our evaluation would be valid,\u201d said Miss Lydon, explaining the department of revenue might not accept book evaluations done by the library.Thus, the library may not be the place to have books assessed though it is happy to receive book donations.\u201cThe onus is on the people who are donating and is on them to have the evaluations worked out,\u201d said Miss Lydon, adding such people should consult qualified book appraisers for such work.ANTIQ Petit Musée Eire SOLD 1494 Sherbrooke St.W® * ® ®° 937-6161 mount reporters, Thea Grivakis and Elizabeth Gallery, the mayor\u2019s youngest daughter.They represented the Eager Beaver, a publication of Miss Edgar's and Miss Cramp's School.Two other ECS reporters were unable to attend the interview.The mayor praised the girls for their questions and then treated them to Cokes and cookies.He also let them in on some of the finer points of good journalism, stressing the importance of taking down his answers accurately and then giving them \u2014 in his own inimitable style \u2014 the licence to \u201cimprove\u201d on what he said if they chose to.Interviewed himself He even interviewed himself now and then, when the questions ran out.\u201cWhen you are a reporter, you have to think of questions your readers would like to know, like how much time it takes to be mayor,\u201d he explained.\u201cNow I'll answer that,\u201d he replied, as the girls hastily wrote in their notebooks across the wide desk.\u2018\u2018So far, being mayor has averaged out to about four hours a day,\u201d he said.\u201cThat is why I'm lucky to own my own business because if I didn\u2019t I couldn't give four hours a day to the citizens.\u201d Another question he thought they should ask as good journalists, he said, was \u201cwhat am I, as mayor, going to do for your school?\u201d He paused to ponder the answer.\u2018I am going to enforce.\u201d \u2018Speeding,\u2019 interjected his wife, Nancy, who had arrived in the office moments earlier to drive the reporters home.\u201cAnd parking on the street,\u201d she added.The mayor heartily endorsed her reply adding that he wanted to ensure the safety of the children going to and from school.Junior police course \u201cIt is also my hope,\u201d he continued, \u2018to institute a junior EGAL ™ 484-1172 1 REGAL TAXI 24-HOUR SERVICE plus service to both airports FOR A GREAT VACATION 1310 Greene Avenue, 6th Floor CALL US FIRST.voyages Phyllis Evelyn travel Hein Shuer 989-1222 police course to which the girls of your school would be invited.\u201d To which his wife added: \u2018\u2018And you also hope they will all join the Junior Firefighters course this year, too.\u201d Again, everyone thought that was a good idea, too.The mayor also asked the student reporters if they would like to know what he thought of his council.They did.\u201cI think I'm fortunate to have such a dedicated and intelligent council,\u201d the mayor said, \u2018and I'm very happy with their desire to review and study the practices of the past council with the idea of improving them (the practices).\" The girls busily scribbled down his answers amidst the occasional METRO WIN A MICROWAVE OVEN Drawing January 28 ; Ask for your coupons IR Ns COOKIES FOR THE PRESS: It was cookies and Cokes for 11-year-old journalists after they interviewed Mayor Brian Gallery Monday afternoon in the mayor's office at city hall.Thea Grivakis, 500 Roslyn avenue, left, and Elizabeth Gallery, 627 Belmont avenue, represented Miss Edgar's and Miss Cramp's School.giggle.\u201cTake your time.Copy it all down without any mistakes,\u201d he explained.If they were unsure of their quotes, he added, they were most welcome to call back.It was a typical, informative reporting session with the new mayor.And if the new reporters were looking for a good journalism teacher, they had gone to an old pro.FOR j ® LUMBER AND PLYWOOD FOR HOME *® AND INDUSTRY ORDER YAN IANEE w AYS 7 30 AM 5 30PM SATURDAYS 8 30 PM 4 PM Call 748-6161 SHEARER RUTHERFORD INC.50 STINSON BLVD.TWO BLOCKS EAST OF NATIONAI Fit M BOARD Royal Trust Real Estate 4145 Sherbrooke W.Westmount, corner Greene 932-1 1 12 [ARE fom eg Satu AAT has Drop into our office and receive the latest issue of Royal COLLECTION OF HOMES John Aird 933-9184 Jane Allan 487-4791 Barbara Besner 937-6448 Diane Bujold 481-5473 Joann Colby 935-8625 Isabelle Côté 934-1767 Julia Daniels 487-0071 Joseph Fara) 935-3131 Brien Foster 488-7980 Aubrey Kinsman 937-3100 EvaKlein 489-5509 Valerie Kyle 737-6911 Josephine Lantier 932-0567 James R.Quinlan,F.r.1.Manager Joan McCallum 935-8154 Brian McGuigan 937-8383 Joan McGuigan 937-8383 Les McLennan 937-1188 Brigitte Meagher 486-9438 Jean Murray 935-7320 Elizabeth Paul 481-9915 Yvette Perras 342-5937 Nicole Powell 932-0016 Dorothy Raich 931-7190 Gerda Spies 933-5273 Georgette Strous 934-1655 Mika Brisson Zamoyska 935-2789 ee\u201d 1AN CO oo EAN AO MMUNS 4 0 A RL A xaminer Mdking all of Westmount your heme Published every Thursday by J.W.Sancton & Sons Ltd.155 Hillside Avenue, Westmount, PQ H3Z 2Y8 Editorial, Accounting, Circulation, Display Advertising Departments 932-3157 Classified Advertising, 8:30 am to 5 pm weekdays to 8:00 pm Mondays and Tuesdays 931-7511 The Examiner aims to be an independent, clean newspaper for the home, devoted to public service.Mail subscriptions in Canada, $12.00 per year; 2 years $22.25; 3 years $31.00 Subscriptions of less than one year.25 cents per copy plus $2 handing.Twenty-hive cents a copy.Outside Canada.additional $20.00 a year Member of the Canadian Community Newspapers Association, Ontario Community Newspapers Association.Second class mail registration number 1760 4 - Vol.LVI, No.4, Thursday, January 26, 1984 CCNA 7 VERIFIEO CIRCULATION Pair We Say Traffic accidents ONE of the casualties of integration of our Westmount Police force along with those of other suburbs into an overall island constabulary has been loss of the concomitant integration of police services with other activities of the City of Westmount.By and large we have been blessed by the quality of the directors sent here to command the local MUC Station 23.None has been more competent than Dir.Michel Groulx nor more desirous of being, so far as circumstances allow, in effect a key Westmount department head.Sadly, however, those circumstances militate against Dir.Groulx being directly responsible and responsive to the general manager of the city, whose office co-ordinates all other aspects of municipal operations.These comments are sparked by the map and story on page two of our issue of last week, wherein were presented graphically Westmount traffic accidents during 1983.The data were obtained by THE EXAMINER from MUC Station 23 following the sad discovery that no such tally appeared to be available at city hall.Whatever the reason, this demonstrated once again that a single authority in the realm of local government is better than split responsibility.How does this matter?Well, the actual numbers reveal what perhaps may have been known in only a general way, that the most accident-prone thoroughfare of Westmount is Sherbrooke street, and the most dangerous intersection is at Victoria avenue, closely followed by the Claremont corner.Claremont and de Maisonneuve boulevard is Westmount's third worst safety problem, then come the Sherbrooke conjunctions with Lansdowne, Mt.Pleasant-Greene and Elm avenues.The obvious question to be asked by citizens \u2014 motorists, pedestrians and parents of children crossing our streets \u2014 is: What is being done?With the city responsible for the conditions for safety and the police observing the effectiveness or otherwise of safety measures, the co-ordination of their respective roles looms as highly important.Without it, conditions cannot be expected to improve on any systematic basis, such as obtained up to a dozen or so years ago, before police separation.Much of the traffic control system of West- mount dates from pre-MUC police days.For example, the intricate traffic lights at Victoria and Sherbrooke, as at many other intersections, were devised by Lt.Stanley Hugman, imaginative head of the Westmount Police traffic section.If he were still around even he would agree that after a decade and a half and in light of 21 recorded accidents there in one year, it is time for a re-examination of the problem \u2014 which undoubtedly has altered considerably with the passage of time.Fortunately, Westmount did not chalk up a single traffic fatality during all of 1983, though unhappily there was one on Jan.5 of this year at Dorchester boulevard and Greene (where only six mishaps were noted last year).However, traffic safety remains a joint concern of police and city and it is to be hoped that both liaison and joint efforts may be strengthened to bring down for 1984 the rather disturbing score of 457 traffic accidents at 120 intersections reported last year.No item of city business should have a higher priority than the safety of its citizens and of all who travel or cross our streets.It ranks far ahead of, for instance, parking, of which so much more fuss is made._ isayr Democracy means government by discussion but it is only effective if you can stop people talking.\u2014Clement Attlee Do it in the open THE morning after last week's mid-month city council meeting, as is customary, the mayor sat down with our reporter and provided a rundown of items dealt with or decided during the in camera general committee meeting which, as usual, had taken place before and after the public portion of the meeting Monday evening.The results of that briefing appeared in summary form in a story on page three of last week's EXAMINER and in other stories in that issue.What is particularly striking about these reports, apart from their intrinsic interest and the broad range of subject matter, is their obvious lack of secret or confidential elements.The compelling question, therefore, is: Why were these items on the closed-door committee agenda rather than raised in the open, public meeting?Habit.Habit of the city.Every one of these items was of public interest.None, insofar as the public might see, bears any sign of demanding closed- door discussion or laundering before exposure to the citizens of Westmount.We feel the members of council would make the same assessment.None appears desirous of hiding anything.The only likely excuses might be: 1) Some among the mayor and aldermen may feel that they may express themselves more freely when beyond the hearing of the great unwashed; and 2) Habit, and no new directive to do otherwise, on the part of city staff responsible for drawing up agendas for the respective open and closed meetings of our elected local government.Both these excuses bear the stamp of an ultra-conservative idea of \u2018\u2018tradition.\u201d Tradition has its place, notably in West- mount; but there are good and bad traditions and this through the years has been one of our less commendable ones.Indeed, it is notable that every one of the candidates in the November city council elections made openness a platform plank.The mayor himself made the most of this if- elected promise, all the more significant against his eight years of experience with the old ways.\u201cThey Say If only to defend his consenting participation in the old process as alderman and chairman of council\u2019s public information committee \u2014 whatever that meant in practical effect \u2014 one might expect Mayor Gallery to say that not very much if anything of essential public interest was in the end kept from the citizens.Which, of course, is not the point.Discussion of public business in | | [ whatever the practical outcome, is ba principle and by inference was declared so at election time by the seven men and two women who now deal with the municipal business \u2014 more of it than ever in public but also, still and too much, behind closed doors.This council now has been in office nearly three months.This is perhaps not much out of the four years which stretch ahead and not time yet for all councillors to learn all about their jobs.However, it has been long enough for the uneasy feeling that they are developing, however unwittingly, the secrecy habit and perhaps even finding comfort in dealing with all manner of the municipal business in the chummy atmosphere which undoubtedly has grown up among them in the committee room.It is well established what the law requires them to deal with in public and, by now, they should have learned what is required or prudent to keep confidential.We speak here of those many items which lie between those two limits: the perhaps unspectacular bits which nonetheless put flesh and bones on the public business of Westmount.How decisions are reached, the various considerations raised, the alternatives, where various aldermen and the mayor stand \u2014 these are only some of the things which interested citizens are entitled to know, possible only from open discussion \u2014 sometimes more important than the decisions themselves.This council already has demonstrated willingness and ability to practice openness.It is time to turn that principle into practice with regard to the matters still raised and discussed in the committee room for little more apparent reason than this is the way it was done before.Queen Mary sinks?An editorial in The Monitor, N.D.G.Not long ago, we were roundly criticized for making a *\u2018silly\u2019 assumption that the re-naming of streets, such as Atwater to Marguerite Bourgeoys, was part of an overall plan to obliterate the English language from our streets.Our critic was Snowdon councillor Marvin Rotrand who told us that this was silliness, since the motivation of the change was religious rather than nationalistic.We suggested that the number of English Catholics pressing for the change would have been small.English Catholics have been staunch defenders of Anglo rights in recent years \u2014 much more than Protestants because English Catholics, unlike Protestants, are only the rump of the French Catholic School Commission and the mostly French- speaking church.English Catholics, through the loss of their Italian recruits at St.Leonard, have felt the cutting edge of Quebec nationalism as no other group has.It was also said that our suggestion that this was part of a continuing policy was foolish.And that our idea of having Alliance Québec strike intelligence and operations committees to determine first what the next move would be and study them and secondly, an operations committee that would fight to change street names from French to English in English districts, under the principle that the best defence is an offence.The wisdom of our second \u2018\u2018foolish\u201d\u2019 suggestion has not been tested, but if the proof of the pudding is in the eating, then the latest thrust by the St.Jean Baptiste Society to have Queen Mary road's name changed to Chemin de I'Oratoire is certainly an indication of the next move.Now that is a move that should be examined by Alliance Québec.The process should be studied carefully.From where did the idea spring?Who constitutes the various committees backing j Do they have interlocking membership What are the rules of name changes to streets?Does anyone in AQ know?The current thrust for street name changes definitely is moving along a Catholic salient and is undoubtedly tied to the Pope's visit this fall.Can the AQ ask that a St.George street be established instead of Olivier avenue in Westmount, for example?The idea is to tie up the commission de toponymie with pleas, looking for favoritism toward the French requests, to exploit in a campaign of foreign propaganda in the rest of Canada and in the U.S.and Europe as well.The idea is to be perceived externally as the underdog, which we most certainly are.That requires a fighting psychology on the Anglo side.If we don\u2019t realize that we are in a fight, we are most certainly going to lose it. and on in ct ch st s \u201cWf our M.P.| Hon.Donald J.Johnston says.| Heartland-hinterland IN THE last two weeks I have met with business and political groups in Alberta and New Brunswick.This week I am travelling west for meetings with groups in British Columbia and meeting with the Province of Saskatchewan-to sign a new Economic and Regional Development greement (ERDA).Many businessmen do as much travel and some travel more.One would think the ease with which Canadians criss-cross our country combined with national television and instantaneous national communication would serve to bring the areas of our country closer together.Yet for all these wonders of modern technology serving to draw us closer together, in some respects, regions feel further removed from the centre today than ever before.Unfortunately, the \u2018\u2018heartland-hinter- land\u201d syndrome is alive and well, flourishing in the west and surviving in the east.It is frustrating and dismaying because it serves to perpetuate strong regionalism to the detriment of the overall national interest.It also plays a role in balkanizing our domestic market by nurturing the growth of internal barriers to the free flow of goods, services, capital and people.Senate reform It is this heartland-hinterland concept which provides incentives for Senate reform, the thought being that regional representation in a national Senate could offset the power of the House of Commons, based as it is on the demography of the country.A report from the Joint Committee on Senate Reform will be forthcoming very shortly.While I await its conclusions with great interest, my inclination is to look first to the House of Commons to solve the institutional problem.Whatever the new institutional arrangements may be, they should help eliminate the \u201cperception\u201d of central direction and control.However, there is also a reality of central economic control, not related to government institutions, but to the predominant role played by Toronto and Montreal, in the private sector decision-making process.No amount of parliamentary reform will change that.What could?I believe that the \u2018information society\" we are now a part of will serve the country well in that regard.With the right mix of federal and provincial policies, the east and west should become very much a part of Canada's economic heartland in the 1980s and 1990s.More on this subject next week.Richard D.French says.Advertising tax THE electronic media in Quebec suffer a particular handicap, created by the heavy thinkers in the Parti Québecois.All adver- atising on radio and television is taxed by he government of Quebec at a rate of two percent.Thus, when a national advertiser like Procter and Gamble, Kellogg's, or Molson establishes a cross-country budget for advertising, it either adds two percent to top off the Quebec allocation or \u2014 what in fact occurs \u2014 it gets two percent less advertising per Quebec dollar spent.Of course, this reduces revenues for the Quebec media proportionally.The idea behind the tax was a mixture of ideology and bureaucratic ambition.The untrammeled functioning of private markets is of course a source of deep unease for the PQ.Radio and television stations were profitable in the mid-'70s.Advertising was feared as a tool to induce the weak- kneed consumer into expenses and habits he or she couldn't \u2014 according to the PUBLIC SCHOOLS PUT ON DRIVE To ATTRACT STUDENTS FROM PRIVATE SCHOOLS.jprapqu'en political and bureaucratic party line \u2014 support or thrive under.Voila! Tax advertising and use the proceeds to create counter-advertising.Counter-advertising was supposed to undo the damage done by advertising.It promoted better financial and health practices for consumers.a good thing, no doubt.Then came financial problems in the public sector.By 1982-83, the two-percent tax was creating revenue as ever, but counter- advertising for the promotion of healthy life-styles and debt-free consumers was drastically reduced.In fact, the public revenue in question was no longer financing social marketing.It was dropping, virtually unnoticed, directly into the insatiable maw of the public treasury.Why does this matter?A society's only capacity to express itself collectively resides in its media.Montreal has one of the most competitive electronic media markets anywhere, with French and English stations from Canada, the United States, and France.If the Quebec outlets are to thrive, they need every bit of revenue.Why should they pay more than newspapers, or, for that matter, any other corporate enterprise?You Say A litany of complaints about Canada Post Corp.Sir: Your last week\u2019s Editorial Notes on the postal service prompts me \u2014 a year after 1 wrote you my first letter, \u2018More horror stories about mail delivery\u201d (THE EXAMINER, Jan.20, 1983) \u2014 to send you this update with a select choice of my most recent experiences: 1.On Sept.23 and Dec.2 important registered letters were not delivered to us even though it was ascertained on the intercom that someone was in the apartment.These letters, the first from the Régie du logement, were needed for my hearings at the Régie on Sept.28 and Dec.5, respectively.If I had not gone to the post office and insisted on having them there and then I do wonder, considering my experiences with loss and delays in my mail, whether I would have received them.2.Ihave yet to receive letters of Nov.21 and 29 dispatched from the Ontario Press Council in Ottawa.3.A Dec.29 letter from Mr.R.Michael Warren, president of Canada Post Corporation, concerning (1) above, reached me on Jan.6, unsealed.As usual it was not postdated.On that same day I received another letter, this one postdated Dec.29, from Mount St.Francis, Indiana.And in that same period, Indiana did not have more clement weather than we did here.4.Now for the prize-winner.À letter from a downtown Royal Bank branch dispatched on Dec.9 reached us on Jan.5, not in its original bank envelope with the transparent address window \u2014 a fact checked with the bank \u2014 but in an ordinary envelope addressed to \u2018Occupant\u201d\u2019 with our apartment number and postdated Dec.29, Jacksonville, Florida.What next?How long am I to continue with this job of mine, now in its fourth year, of filing such complaints?R.H=-Ferahian 4998 de Maisonneuve blvd.west WESTMOUNT H3Z 1N2 6 - The Westmount Examiner, Thursday, January 26, 1984 Tar Westmount Canmsnr Forty-five Years Ago January 27, 1939 \u201cWhen a large bakery oven exploded in the rear of the A.Maitland confectionery store, 4124 St.Catherine street, west, Mrs.E.McDermott, 53, an employee of the shop, was overcome by coal gas and was taken to the Women's General Hospital for treatment.Considerable damage was caused by the blast.At the time of the explosion the woman was working in the front of the store.She was rapidly overcome by the escaping coal fumes.The noise of the blast was heard by Cons.H.Wilson who was making the rounds of his beat and upon investigating he found the woman in a semiconscious condition.\u201d Thirty-five Years Ago January 21, 1949 \u201cFormation of a special RCAF radar and communications unit in Montreal was announced Tuesday by Defence Minister Brooke Claxton at a press conference in the headquarters building of No.401 City of Westmount Fighter Squadron.This unit is the first of a series of technical training units planned to provide Canada with a reserve of trained radar and communications technicians.It will be known as No.1 Radar and Communications Unit, RCAF (Auxiliary), and will be under the command of Squadron Leader K.R.Patrick, OBE.The operational headquarters and training laboratory facilities will be at No.401 Squadron headquarters, 4450 Sherbrooke street west.\" Twenty-five Years Ago January 23, 1959 \u201cIn his inaugural address as Mayor of Westmount, John C.Cushing outlined the city\u2019s thinking regarding Metropolitan Government, forecast a continued improvement in public services and counselled caution against allowing the building of too many commercial establishments in the lower part of the city \u2018to spoil its essential residential character.\" .Mayor Cushing said that the Croteau Report on Metro Government went further than was originally recommended in the Paquette Report.Westmount supported the latter, and was cooperating with the other municipalities in presenting a brief to the provincial government.\" Fifteen Years Ago January 23, 1969 \u2018Alexis Nihon Plaza, designed as a showplace shopping centre for Westmount, where it is located, and Montrealers, is fast becoming a nightmare for police, for the merchant tenants, and for the law-abiding persons who pass through it in their tens of thousands daily either to shop or as the MTC bus-Métro terminals\u2019 link.There are convenient benches .But these are occupied, more often than not, by a seamy array of characters, mostly youths of both sexes, who have made the plaza their hangout from the weather, boredom and, perhaps, lack of decent homes.They have also made it the base for a wide variety of crime, including shoplifting, car-breaking, assault and, it is suspected, dope- peddling.\u201d Five Years Ago January 25, 1979 \u2018Reader's Digest Association of Canada Ltd., one of Westmount's largest employers, will not be moving its operations from this city and province in the near future.Instead, the publishing firm will reorganize its Westmount facilities, based in two major locations, the headquarters at 215 Redfern avenue and the annex at the corner of Metcalfe and Hillside avenues.The decision follows analysis of a staff survey and study .in which other locations in Quebec and other provinces were mooted .\" « Athoug By JOAN CAPRÉOL ARCHITECT Mark Shapiro's claim to fame is the million-dollar shopping centre Galeries des Monts at St.Sauveur, which was designed and constructed in 1974.\u201cIt was a very special project in that there was very strict control by the municipality regarding the architectural design,\u201d said Mr.Shapiro.\u2018The French- Canadian style, sloped metal roof was mandatory.That was a prerequisite by the municipality.\u201cThe concept for this centre is very different from an urban centre in that its setting is in the Laurentian mountains and the shoppers in the area are generally those accustomed to be out of doors irrespective of weather conditions.So it was decided that the form of the centre should be composed of a series of independent buildings which would be clustered together representing the feeling of a small village setting.\u201cCommunication between buildings is via an open air mall which is developed with planting and seating areas as well as wood pergolas (a system of trellises).\u201cEach building is subdivided into a series of boutiques.Traditional architectural elements integrated in the design of the buildings include dormer windows, metal roofs, solid timber, exposed structures and materials such as stone, stucco and wood cladding.Traditional hardware \u201cSpecial design elements include hand- carved wood signs supported with wrought iron brackets for each of the tenants; traditional wrought iron hardware at boutique entrance doors; bay windows with small glass panes; and metal lantern-styled exterior lighting.\u201cThere is a total of 25 boutiques and a food store.\u201d Mr.Shapiro is a serious, thoughtful man of 49 who could pass for 35, the way he feels.He is slim and has hazel eyes, dimples and a gentle sense of humor.He and Harvey Wolfe have been partners since 1962.They have had their Westmount office at 4460 Sherbrooke street west since 1966.The firm is now working on home renovations in Westmount and small commercial projects.Mr.Shapiro designed the eight-million- dollar Bialik High School in Céte St.Luc, a private parochial school.\u201cIt's different in that new schools are not being built today.\" commented Mr.Shapiro.He also designed an industrial building in St.Jean, Que., for a tool manufacturing company and one for a footware manufacturer in Alexandria, Ont.He is proud of his design of a large, 250,000-square-foot shopping centre at Ramat Gan in Israel.\u201cIt is our first project outside of Canada,\" he remarked.\u201cIsraeli architects are carrying out the concept.\u201d In Ontario, Mr.Shapiro has done other buildings, including one in Kingston.Some interesting work here has been the conversion of the Empress Theatre, Cinema V and the Cinéma de Paris and Cinéma Fleur de Lys, on St.Catherine street.Designed synagogue Mr.Shapiro designed the Execaire Aviation terminal at Dorval airport, Beth Zion Synagogue in Côte St.Luc, the ski chalet at Morin Heights two years ago, and private residences in Westmount and Beaconsfield.What does he think of Montreal's architecture?\u2018I find that the restoration and renovation projects that one sees in Boston, Philadelphia and other centres with an interesting architectural background are far more successful than many of the new projects being designed,\u201d Mr.Shapiro replied.\u201cMontreal has a rich heritage of older buildings which, with proper development and restoration, could continue to maintain the original beauty of the city.The Alcan project, for one, is an excellent example of integrating the new and old and more projects of this nature should be encouraged.Most of the new buildings lack a personality and a scale befitting the harborfront, the downtown core and the mountain as a background.\u201d What does he think of Westmount's architecture?\u2018The residential area on the mountainside has a warmth and charm with a very European flavor,\" Mr.Shapiro Mark Shapiro answered.\u201cThe commercial areas of Victoria and Greene avenues with their low- rise scale provide a comfortable atmosphere and good relationship through the conservation and restoration of original buildings in the area.The many parks and mature trees add to the beauty of the city.\u201d Mr.Shapiro said that business has been slow related to the economy and to the uncertainty of the political situation in Quebec.\u2018\u2018Our practice is tied to the private sector which has not expanded or done much commercial development in recent years,\u201d he said.Architecture, he continued, is a very interesting field but like other professions today, one has to be fortunate to find a position with a good firm.Mother plays golf Mr.Shapiro was born in Montreal, the son of the late Joseph Shapiro, QC, and Janet Shapiro, 85, who is an inspiration to her age group.She still drives a car, walks several miles each and plays golf all summer.Mr.Shapiro has two brothers.David Shapiro is an oral surgeon practising in Pointe Claire.Barry Shapiro is a lawyer with the firm Robinson, Cutler, Sheppard, Borenstein, Shapiro.Mr.Shapiro attended Iona and Montreal High Schools.He got his Bachelor of Architecture at McGill University in 1958.He travelled for a year in Europe, Russia, and Israel on a Hugh McLennan traveling scholarship in 1960.\u201cThe trip to Leningrad and Moscow was a depressing experience from a standpoint of the way the population lived,\" Mr.Shapiro said.\u2018At the same time it was interesting from an architectural point of view.Some of the historic buildings were very interesting.Contemporary architecture was very depressing.The buildings were just massive blocks of stone or concrete without F PROFILE ntiu architect enn, ras > EXAMINER photo by Rick Kerrigan any architectural detailing and totally lacking in scale.\u201cIsrael is a fascinating country.I was there four years ago and was able to visit the old section of Jerusalem, which I was unable to do in 1960.They are doing some marvelous restoration work in the old city of Jerusalem and they are very conscious of good design and appropriate use of materials in most of their new architecture.\u201d On his return to Montreal Mr.Shapiro worked for a year with Eliasoph & Berkowitz Architects.Opened firm In 1962, at the age of 28, he and Harvey Wolfe, who graduated from McGill at the same time as Mark, opened their firm.Mr.Shapiro is married to Hannah Zipper, \u201can excellent wife and mother who raised three marvelous boys.\u201d They are David, 23, a research assistant in the field of energy and environmental policy in Washington.He got his Bachelor of Science and Chemistry at the Massachusetts Institute of Technolog lly 1981.He is returning to graduate schools his PhD in mathematics.Jonathan, 21, is in his final year in political science at McGill and is applying to law schools.Jamie, 18, is in the Bachelor of Science program at Harvard University in Cambridge, Mass.Mr.Shapiro cross country skis, swims, does photography and visits his children spread far and wide.Next Week's Profile: Sen.Hartland Moison AJ f igan ally was isit was me city sof of iro vey the Zip- vho ant 1tal alor the D A rd Ty ad on VILLE MARIE.Continued from page one the urban areas.The CLSCs were designed to be the doorway to other social services and were to be the first contact for the population.They would deal with preventative social services and community groups.The social service centres are involved with the beneficiaries over a longer period of time in a treatment situation.Some of the services given by the social service centres are the department of youth protection, adoption services, foster care, aid to the aged, family counselling, etc.\u201cIn Montreal, particularly in the anglo area, we have not had CLSCs and therefore Ville Marie has had to fill the gap,\u201d said Mrs.Boylston.\u201cThe ministry is on record as being determined to complete the network of CLSCs.\u201cVille Marie supports the CLSC movement.However, it is concerned about the current plan to transfer services.In the discussion with other social service centres it has been apparent that the ministry has neither consulted nor offered a rationale for transferring specific services at this time.\u201cOur board has consistently reaffirmed the necessity for guarantees for access to English- language services, whether that be within the framework of a social service centre or a CLSC.We could not engage in any negotiations to transfer our services unless that guarantee is respected.\u201d Once a month THE EXAMINER reports the addresses, names of buyers and sellers, prices and tax valuations of the previous month\u2019s Westmount real estate transfers, analyzing their significance to local property owners.There soon may be less noise from the CPR Glen yards bordering Westmount, but there will likely be fewer workers there too.CP Rail told the yard's workers Jan.11 that many of them likely would be laid off as VIA Rail plans to move the base of its transcontinental run from Montreal to Toronto in mid-April.The move affects over 200 CP workers since CP services the cars in the Glen yards under contract to VIA.\u201cThe way it looks right now, it doesn't look like they'll keep it in Montreal,\u201d said Pierre Pepin, secretary of Aberdeen Lodge 182, the Glen workers\u2019 local of the Brotherhood of Railway Carmen.He told THE WESTMOUNT EXAMINER, \u201cIt's not CP 1 blame, it's VIA.\u201d Opponents of the move claim it could leave the Glen yards almost without function as a servicing depot.\u201cAll that will be left around By ROB SOUTHCOTT Westmount is the commuter trains,\u201d said Guy Chartrand, president of Transport 2000, a transportation consumer group.Westmount city council was caught in a tricky position when the union and Transport 2000 requested the city support the workers\u2019 fight to save their jobs.Council decided last week to send a letter of support to the union.\u201cOn one hand we were giving them a hand and on the other hand they were giving us a problem,\u201d Alderman Paul Fortin told THE EXAMINER.Still, he said it was necessary to support the union because the threat against the men's jobs was a \u2018\u2018wider issue\u201d than that of the noise.\u201cWe have a less important situation than of jobs,\u201d said Ald.Fortin.In its letter to the union, the city noted the question of the noise, Yagod Anita Yagod RES.482-5144 THE REAL ESTATE SPECIALISTS \u2014 RESIDENTIAL AND REVENUE PROPERTIES Westmount Realties broker ui CONSIDERING o SELLING YOUR PROPERTY?¢ BUYING A PROPERTY?* INVESTING IN REAL ESTATE?o KNOWING THE POTENTIAL VALUE OF YOUR PROPERTY?L,* WHY NOT TELEPHONE US TODAY AND GIVE US THE OPPORTUNITY TO BE OF SERVICE?Cal 483-1600 3846 Sherbrooke St.W., Suite 105 The Westmount Examiner, Thursday, January 26, 1984 - 7 City supporting rail union wants jobs but not noise and asked for the union's support in combatting the problem.While the noise problem soon may be settled for Westmount, the Glen yard workers are waiting for labor negotiators to work out the future of their jobs.Some men with seniority may be moved to other rail yards in the Montreal area, but the workers they replace will join the less senior workers in the yard on the unemployment lines.Smoke alert A smell of smoke in the general area of Claremont and N.D.G avenues Jan.15 brought firefighters to check out the source.Fire officials said no fire was found and the odor may have been caused by fireplaces in use in the area.Firemen check burnt paper Firefighters and public safety officers were called Friday to 696 Aberdeen avenue for soot on the property and found the remains of burnt paper in the general area.The paper was believed to have been burnt in a fireplace and went up the chimney before being totally consumed.Public safety officials said it was against MUC regulations to burn paper in a fireplace.Mustang taken from garage A resident of Sherbrooke street told police Sunday her car had disappeared from the apartment building garage at 435 Grosvenor avenue where she rents space.The car.a 1975 Ford Mustang, was last seen Jan.15 at 3 pm.Its disappearance was discovered a week later at 11:55 am.WESTMOUNT HOMEOWNERS Your 1984 tax bill should have arrived by now.Study it carefully.Multiply the total assessment by 1.08, the comparative factor for 1984.Does that represent a fair market value for your house?If not, or if you have any questions, please contact ANDY DODGE, enr.real estate consultant specializing in Westmount tax valuation appeals 930 de Courcelle, Montreal 932-6495 Claire Duhamel Juanita Etcheverry Betty Firstbrook Rod R.Quesnel, Manager Claudette Limoges Tort, Sheila Whitzman Annie Armstrong Betty Firstbrook Peggy Marsh Philip Berman Alice Gagnon Jules Milhan Maria Boni Farla Grover Peggy McMullan Herbert Bourgeois Patricia Hamilton Lillian O'Mara Jacqueline-Nantel Brault llona Hussar Sam Rauch Thérése Brault Beatrice Kaufman Elizabeth Ross Ursula Clabon Alice Kennedy lan Ross Sonia Collins Marie-Claire Lalancette Maria Santini Alison Cosgrove Anne-Marie Larue Bobbie Tilden Betty Cross Barbara Leiter Georgette Tremblay Pauline Vickers Shella Whitzman it took teamwork and team spirit to achieve record sales for 1983.And, just like all championship teams, we have our leaders, people who gain special recognition through their sheer determination to reach for higher summits.Below are 5 of our leading sales agents who have merited special honors for doing your homework.WWE THANK THEM.Montreal Trust is pleased to honor Betty Firstbrook for being No.1 agent in our office, and Sheila Whitzman, Maria Santini, Marie-Claire Lalancette and Pauline Vickers for leading our successful team.I> ry Montréal Trust WE'LL WORK HARD FOR YOU Montreal Trust Westmount Office 4150 St.Catherine Street West Westmount, Quebec (514) 934-1818 Pauline Vickers 8 - The Westmount Examiner, Thursday, January 26, 1984 City accounts for October more than $10.2 million Accounts of $10,235,220.83 were approved by the city of West- mount for the month of October 1983.Payments made by the city include a payroll of $658,946.65.The October accounts also include the purchase of a new vacuum leaf loader trailer, the overhaul of a compressor in the artificial ice arena and the printing of a booklet on nuclear disarmament.Details of October payments greater than $2,000 follow: Canada Post Corporation: $2,120.00, for certified letters and certified letter envelopes; Westmount Firefighters Ass'n.: $4,641.15, employees\u2019 deductions and city's contribution for the month of September 1983; Montreal Firemen's Credit Union: $4,002.00, employees\u2019 deductions and city's contribution for the month of September 1983; Entretien Chevalier (Région de la Ville de Montréal): $2,950.00, janitorial work done during September 1983 in various city buildings; Crédit Commercial de France (Canada): $3,500,000.00, purchase of term deposit receipt for 28 days at 9.25 percent from Oct.4, 1983 to Nov.1, 1983; Banque Continentale du Canada: $3,500,000.00, purchase of term deposit receipt for 42 days at 9.27 percent from Oct.4, 1983 to Nov.15, 1983; Miron Inc.: $4,752.00, 100 tickets for garbage dump; 123097 Canada Inc.: $2,126.00, hired trucking for week ending Oct 1, 1983; La Croix Bleue du Québec: $5,686.31, remittance of September deductions for October 1983 coverage; Avenue Theatre: $2,293.52, to refund overpayment of 1982/83 business tax as per business tax insp.report; Bank of Montreal: $3,023.46, council remuneration for the month of October 1983; Sangamo Canada: $5,363.32, purchase of electrical metering equipment; Sunoco Inc.: $3,364.51, purchase of oil for motors and transmission oil; Société Générale (Canada) Leasing Inc.: $4,660.11, computer equipment rental for the month of October 1983; Mussens Equipment Ltée.: $20,086.52, purchase of a new vacuum leaf loader trailer; Anlo Inc.: $2,000.00, postage advance re mayor's letter of October Georgia Carpenter in Trust: 4335 Westmount Avenue.Spacious 10-room residence with view, modern kitchen, 3 bathrooms, ground-floor % house on quiet street near Xo park.Large living room and x : dining room, 5 bedrooms, 3 bathrooms.Very bright home.Lise Beauchemin 481-4688 WESTMOUNT Home and office.Centrally located for a professional wishing to have office and living under one roof.Separate entrance in basement.M.Tsadilas 489-0631 LICENSED BROKER FRANK NORMAN HOMES OF DISTINCTION 731-6817 m bedrooms, three bathrooms, parking.$159,000.RoseMarie Martin 332-2516 $2,000.00, to cover donation for printing of a bilingual booklet on nuclear disarmament for distribution to Westmount residents; Ministére de la Justice: $6,200.00, to cover fines collected during the month of September 1983; Pavages North State Inc.: $112,629.22, payment for restoration of sidewalks and street cuts: 1983; TPF & C Ltee.: $7,111.00, professional services rendered re Fire & Police Fund and General Fund; Bank of Montreal: $4,476.25, commission as paying agent on $2,081,000; Commercial Credit of France (Canada): $800,000.00, purchase of term deposit receipt from October 11, 1983 at 9.50 percent; Les Entreprises Gilles et Pierre Inc.: $19,310.00, garbage removal and disposal for the month of September 1983; APV Hall Crepaco Inc.: $18,824.33, to overhaul no.2 compressor in the artificial ice rink, repair the connecting rod and install new delivery valve guide on Hall compressor; Canadian General Electric Co.Ltd.: $2,071.00, purchase of eight traffic signal heads for inventory, 123097 Canada Inc.: $2,431.00, hired trucking for week ending Oct.8, 1983; Police & Firemen\u2019s Pension Fund, $32,516.52, employees\u2019 deductions and city\u2019s contribution for the month of September 1983 plus October 1983 contribution to the P&FPF to cover the actuarial deficit as at December 1981; General Pension Fund: $54,476.99, employees\u2019 deductions and city's cont.for the month of September 83 plus October 1983 contribution to the general pension fund to cover the actuarial deficit as at December 1981; Ministére du Revenu: $65,499.05, provincial sales tax summary for the month of September 1983; Ministére du Revenu: $128,575.03, remittance of employees\u2019 and employer's portion of provincial payroll deductions for period ending September 1983; eceiver General of Canada, $106,252.26, remittance of employees\u2019 and employer's portion of federal payroll deductions for period ending September 1983; Municipal Housing Bureau of Westmount, $3,784.00, fourth quarterly instalment towards 1983 deficis; Les Pavages North Star Inc.: $22,288.66, payment for reconstruction of Summit steps\u2019 landing; Drummond McCall Inc.: $2,147.72, purchase of abrasion resistant steel plates for snow plows; Francon: $2,869.34, to supply concrete for inventory; The Gazette: $2,067.52, printing done for city clerk's office re elections; Maher Inc.: $2,172.30, purchase of clothes and boots for Public Security Unit; Sheridan Nurseries Ltd.: $2,019.92, purchase of plants for greenhouse; Texaco Canada Inc.: $14,290.87, purchase of gas and diesel for inventory; Uniforms Trasso: $3,063.75, purchase of work clothes for various departments; Vanhof & Blokker Ltd.: $3,254.55, purchase of plants for greenhouse; Vibrapipe Ltd.: $3,635.38, purchase of gully sections for inventory; Hydro-Québec: $522,162.93, electricity purchased from Aug.26 to Sept.27, 1983; Bronstetter, Wilkie, Penhale, Donovan, Giroux & Charb.: $10,618.58, professional services rendered for the month of August 1983; Canada Post Corporation: $3,180.00, to cover cost of certified mail (summonses); Les Fabricants Atlantique du Qué.: $4,905.00, purchase of a trailer (8'x16') for parks department; McEwen Sainthill: $3,212.00, purchase of clothes for Public Security Unit; City of Westmount: $4,712.16, managerial payroll \u2014 transfer cheque for period ending Oct.28, 1983; Bell Canada: $6,242.38, telephone cost for all city departments, bill dated Sept.28, 1983; Standard Life: $9,771.33, non- insured pensions payable as at Oct.27, 1983; Montreal Trust: $2,450.00, interim administration fee re pension funds for the month ended Sept.30, 1983; L'Entretien Chevalier: $2,950.00, janitorial work done during October at various city departments; Quebec Traction Chains Ltd.: $11,426.82, purchase of traction chains for truck tires; Thorne Riddell: $8,000.00, interim audit fees re services rendered for the financial exercise ending Dec.31, 1983; Utlas Inc.: $3,078.68, on-line services for Library cataloging for the period Aug.27 to Sept.30, 1983; Volcano: $6,646.87, work done on the boiler at Victoria Hall; Moloney Electric Corporation: $13,301.00, purchase of 15 distribution transformers; Entreprises Blouin Ltée.: $68,716.47, purchase of parking meters; Dieselrama Inc.: $3,615.99, repairs and labor done to a Volvo front end loader; City of Westmount: $201,758.25, debt service payment due Oct.30, 1983, municipality: $186,446.40, electric utility: $15,311.75; Sofati Ltée.: $2,817.86, to refund overpayment of 1983 business tax as per insp.report dated Sept.13, 1983; Sangamo Canada: $18,421.00, purchase of metering equipment (capital expenditure); Xerox Canada Inc.: $2,058.46, equipment rental for September 1983; Miron Inc.: $4,752.00, 100 tickets for garbage dump.Detectors need new batteries Weak batteries in two smoke detectors brought firefighters to two different homes Sunday, fire officials report.The first call was at 6:54 am for a detector beeping at 39 Holton avenue where the owner was advised to have the battery changed.The second call came at 6 pm from the apartment building at 225 Melville avenue.Firemen could hear it beeping in apartment nine where no one was home.The door was pried open using an axe.Fire officials said police were informed.Again, a weak battery was found to be the problem.Office alarm found faulty A faulty alarm system in the office building at 4150 St.Catherine street Jan.16 brought firefighters to the scene at 6:14 am, fire officials report.A number of false calls have been answered recently at the building owing to alarm problems in a computer room.Fire officials said this time the problem occurred in the building's alarm system.Homes + Distinction Resxiences de chan YOUR HOME ADDRESS Humes of Dishinc tin Towa of uel Rove! Call your \u2018\u2018Agent of Distinction\u201d for more details.LICENSED BROKER FRANK NORMAN HOMES OF DISTINCTION 731-6817 Frank Norman\u2019s new \u2018\u2018home brochure service\u2019\u2019 is an excellent way to sell your home.Shouldn\u2019t your home have this distinct advantage ?bth À ¢ City pays out $16.7 million in accounts for November City council approved the expenditure of $16,773,103.88 during November 1983, much of it involving term deposits in financial institutions.Shirts for the Public Security Unit, work on the deck at the swimming pool and the initial payment for a fire vehicle are included in the payments.Payroll for the month amounted to $520,918.14.Details of payments in excess of $2,000 follow: Communauté Urbaine de Montréal: $3,262,981.00, November instalment for Westmount's share of the MUC operating cost ($2,201,487), MUCTC deficit and debt service ($1,039,866) and MUC Police service re 1970-71 ($21,628.00); City of Westmount: $544,712.75, debt service payment: (Municipality - $439,608.15; electric utility - $105,104.60); Canada Post Corporation: $2,174.05, mailing of 15,754 notices of poll cards for 1983 Westmount municipal election; Westmount Firefighters Association: $4,791.55, employees\u2019 deductions and city\u2019s contribution for the month of October 1983; Montreal Firemen\u2019s Credit Union: $4,002.00, employees\u2019 deductions for the month of October 1983; Croix Bleue du Québec: $6,244.57, remittance of October deductions and city's contribution for November medical and dental coverage; Commercial Credit of France (Canada): $300,000.00, purchase of rollover daily term deposit receipt from November 1 to open at 9 percent; Banca Commerciale Italiana of Canada: $3,500,000.00, purchase of term deposit receipt for 28 days at 9.30 percent from November 1, 1983 to Nov.29, 1983; L.Dejean & Co.Ltd.: $2,616.80, repairs done to various front end loaders; Société Générale (Canada) Leasing: $4,660.11, rent for the computer for the month of November 1983; 123097 Canada Inc.: $2,390.00, hired trucking for week ending Oct.29, 1983; Mole Construction Inc.: $22,169.65, partial payment for road work done on various streets; Crane Supply: $2,941.43, purchase of outdoor de rinking fountains for parks department; Bronstetter, Wilkie, Penhale, Donovan, Giroux & Charbonneau: $11,392.96, legal services rendered during September plus disbursements; 123097 Canada Inc.: $3,396.00, hired trucking for week ending Nov.5, 1983; Seal Construction of Canada Ltd.: $4,405.00, alterations to Westmount skating rink; Pierreville Fire Trucks Ltd.: $180,000.00, initial payment for one fire truck with 100-foot aerial ladder; Ministére du Revenu: $61,501.17, provincial sales tax remittance collected from light and power sales for the month of October 1983; Ministére du Revenu: $127,429.57, remittance of employees\u2019 and employer's portion of provincial payroll deductions for period ending October 1983; Receiver General of Canada: $108,059.10, remittance of employees\u2019 and employer's portion of federal payroll deductions for period ending October 1983; Ministére de la Justice: $5,450.00, to remit fines collected during the month of October 1983; Police & Firemen's Pension Fund, $31,940.86, employees\u2019 deductions and city's contribution for the month of October 1983 plus November 1983 contribution to the Police & Firemen's Pension Fund to cover the actuarial deficit as at December 1981; General Pension Fund, $56,331.87, employees\u2019 deductions and city\u2019s contribution for the month of October 1983 plus November 1983 actuarial deficit as at December 1981; TPF & C Limitée: $11,886.00, professional services rendered during September 1983 re Police & Fire Pension Fund and General Pension Fund; Banque Commerciale du Canada: $1,500,000.00, purchase of term deposit receipt for 43 days at 9.35 percent from Nov.15, 1983 to Dec.28, 1983; Commercial Credit of France (Canada): $2,000,000.00, purchase of term deposit receipt for 43 days at 9.35 percent from Nov.15 to Dec.28, 83; 123097 Canada Inc.: $6,102.88, hired trucking for week ending Nov.12, 1983; Charles Duranceau Ltée.: $170,773.63, purchase of asphalt for inventory; Utlas Inc.: $2,552.70, billing for online services and standard products for the period Oct.1 to Oct.28, 1983; Domtar Chemicals: $8,407.97, purchase of salt for inventory, Dieselrama Inc.: $2,007.37.repairs and labor done to a dump truck; Francon: $2,969.28, to supply concrete for inventory; Entreprises Gilles & Pierre Inc.: $19,310.00, garbage removal and disposal for the month of October 1983; Bell Canada: $6,025.57, telephone cost for city departments - bill dated Oct.28, 1983; McEwen Sainthill: $2,055.00, purchase of shirts for Public Security Unit; Mussens Equipment Ltd.: $6,867.00, repairs and labor done to four dump trucks; Pirelli Cables Inc.: $9,185.48, purchase of power cables (309 metres), Texaco Canada Inc.: $7,874.00, purchase of gas and diesel for inventory; 123097 Canada Inc.: $13,582.40, hired trucking for week ending Nov.19, 1983; Canada Post Corporation: $3,180.00, to cover cost of certified mail; Les Pavages North State: $35,023.82, payment for restoration of street and sidewalk cuts; Les Constructions D'Alesio Ltée.: $35,949.70, for work done re West- mount swimming pool deck; Gaz Métropolitain: $8,010.60, gas consumption for Victoria Hall and arena from Sept.29 to Oct.31, 1983; Canada Tire Cie: $2,680.31, tires purchased for various city vehicles: Hydro-Québec: $440,812.96, electricity purchased from Sept.27 to Oct.25, 1983; L'Entretien Chevalier: $2,950.00, for janitorial work done at various city departments; Pavages North State Inc.: $5,267.00, rental of a compactor and saws and purchase of concrete; Montreal Trust: $2,450.00, interim Steam scare at plaza A steam scare at Alexis Nihon Plaza brought Westmount firemen to the shopping centre Monday morning shortly after 10:48 am.The problem was traced to a broken coil in the heating system in the Miracle Mart storeroom on the Métro level, fire officials report.Personnel apparently had been trying to find a leak in the system on noticing that the pressure was down.Westmount firemen received the call from the Montreal Fire Department.Caller reports suspicious man Police were called to the Victoria avenue shopping area Tuesday afternoon when a woman reported seeing a suspicious person looking into parked cars.When police arrived in front of 4935 Sherbrooke street to investigate the call, they found the caller had not remained on the scene after calling at 3:40 pm.One man, fitting a general description of the \u2018suspect,\u2019 was checked out but considered not to be suspicious, police said.Burglar leaves loot behind A burglar was \u2018\u201c\u2018all packed and ready to go\" but left the loot behind in the end.Police said they believed the thief was scared off Tuesday last week after breaking into a home on Grosvenor avenue, Residents found their video machine packed in a bag when returning home at 5:10 pm.Earlier in the morning, a house key had been lost, and entry was believed gained with the key.administration fee for pension plan basic scale for the month ended Oct.31, 1983; Mrs.Barbara McCarthy Drury: $2,229.50, to refund overpayment of 1983 taxes as per Board of Revision; Brenhouse Holdings Inc.: $4,218.13, to refund overpayment of 1983 taxes as per Board of Revision; Bangue Continentale du Canada: $2,500,000.00, purchase of term deposit receipt for 36 days at 9.57 percent from Nov.29, 1983 to Jan.4, 1984: Commercial Credit of France (Canada): $1,000,000.00, purchase of term deposit receipt from Nov.29, 1 .The Westmount Examiner, Thursday, January 26, 1984 - 9 Brossard man has rough ride A 42-year-old man was taken to hospital Sunday afternoon after he injured his foot while tobogan- ning at King George Park, fire officials report.A public safety officer went to the man's assistance and called for the fire department\u2019s first responder unit.The man, a resident of Brossard, could not walk and was believed to have a possible broken leg, fire officials said.He was taken to the Reddy Memorial Hospital by Urgences Santé.Burglars flee Abbott break A resident of Abbott avenue scared off burglars in his house Wednesday night last week after hearing noises downstairs, police report.When the man started to descend the stairs about 8 pm, the intruders fled, leaving behind two sets of footprints and $250 damage to the rear door and windows.Two women also managed to foil a burglary in progress at a house on Prospect street the week before (see story last week).CLUB MED Fite?pyongthin)\u2019 Living life to the fullest, and giving everything your best demands being in top physical condition, which is what you begin acquiring the very first time you visit a Centre de conditionnement Nautilus.In just weeks, you'll begin rediscovering the joy of feeling fit amidst a highly relaxing atmosphere.There's not a more ideal place to do so.And, should you register for 1 year between January 3rd and February 24th, 1984, you'll have a chance at feeling the great shape you're in at a Club Med.Yes, you could win one of seven trips for one to the Club Med village of your choice\u201d.Meet with us today.There's a Centre de conditionnement Nautilus near you! *Maximum $1,500 value Contest entry rules and details available at all Centre de conditonnement Nautilus AOU 7777 Metropoliten Fest LASALLE 352.1481 1050 Shevchenko BROSSARD 366 6300 LONGUEUIL 1870 Panama LAVAL 550 Curé Poirier West 672 3681 Centre sportif Carrefour 64-6264 DOWNTOWN 3095 Autoroute Laval REPENTIGNY 1226 St Catherine West 681.6455 740 Pontbnand ® 865-1953 LAVAL 582 0961 CÔTE-DE-LIESSE Val des Arbres Tenrus Club ROCKLAND 8305 Côte de Liesse 1655 Saint Martin Blvd.East Rockland Center 739 2289 568 IAL OFFER 411553 e ASK ABOUT OUR FREE TR 10 - The Westmount Examiner, Thursday, January 26, 1984 Report shows more burglary but no murder The year 1983 was, by and large, a non-violent one in Westmount.There were no murders, no fatal accidents, fewer hold-ups and major crime recorded an il-percent drop over 1982.The year-end crime statistics released this week show that breaking and entering was the only area of major crime on the increase in Westmount.Its additional 27 incidents translate into slightly more than two a month.The 393 cases of reported burglaries include attempts to burglarize.Some 535 shopliftings at Alexis Nihon Plaza, mostly in the Miracle Mart store, accounted for almost 23 percent of the year's 2,328 crimes.The area around the plaza accounted for a number of the year's robberies and thefts, police said, and was one major area of police concentration.There were six fewer robberies, including purse-snatch incidents, involving violence.Thefts from vehicles, one of the major categories of crime in the past five years in Westmount, plunged 21 percent in 1983 from 284 the previous year to 224.Local MUC police director Michel Groulx attributes the year's increase in burglaries in part to the intrusion of the MUC\u2019s \u201ccat burglar\u2019 to Westmount, which led to his ultimate arrest.\u201cThe crime projection for 1983 showed that there would be a tendency for more breaking and entering incidents, as well,\u201d he noted.The solution rate of all West- mount crimes increased from 36.9 percent in 1982 to 39.4 percent in in : 7 sa sn 3 i 7 .- 4 ; 1983 Crime in Westmount as reported by MUC Police Station 23 Total Total % Change 1983 Statistics by month 1982 1983 '82to'83 Jan.Feb.Mar.Apr.May June July Aug.Sept.Oct.Nov.Dec.Murder \u2014 \u2014 \u2014 \u2014 \u2014 \u2014 \u2014- _ \u2014 _\u2014 \u2014 \u2014 \u2014 _\u2014 _\u2014 Sexual crimes, other than assault 17 5 N/A* l \u2014 1 \u2014 \u2014 \u2014 \u2014 1 \u2014 \u2014 2 -\u2014 Robbery 117 111 \u20145.1% 12 5 12 11 1?8 14 9 9 8 7 4 Break and entry 366 393 +7.4% 26 31 32 39 34 34 30 42 26 33 31 35 Theft of vehicles 91 62 -31.9% 3 3 4 4 7 8 6 10 5 5 4 3 Theft from vehicles 284 224 \u2014211% 18 23 28 13 16 10 21 18 12 31 19 15 Other (theft, vandalism, assault, etc.) 1,746 1,533 \u2014122% 103 98 127 152 146 160 104 117 108 142 126 150 TOTAL, AH Crime: 2,621 2,328 \u2014112% 163 160 204 219 215 220 175 197 160 219 189 207 Cases referred to MUC squads 158 140 \u201411.4% 14 12 10 14 16 15 9 9 14 13 9 5 Cases without foundation 47 37 \u201421.3% 3 1 \u2014 2 6 6 1 5 6 1 2 4 Total cases cieared 968 918 -7.2% 63 52 69 104 93 102 60 71 68 94 66 76 \u2014by arrest 654 628 \u20144.0% 40 34 54 74 6 68 47 46 43 5 SI 53 \u2014other than arrest 265 253 \u201445% 20 17 15 28 23 28 12 20 19 39 13 19 SOLUTION RATE: (as percentage) 369 394 +6.8 38.7 325 338 475 433 464 343 36 425 429 349 36.7 Accidents reported 457 457 \u2014 43 34 38 28 39 34 35 27 4 37 36 63 1983.Of 918 cases solved, 654 were closed by arrest.Burglars hit vacant house Every room in a home on St.Catherine street was thoroughly searched between Jan.12 and 19 while residents were away, police report.The break-in was discovered by a cleaning woman.Damage in forcing open a rear door was estimated at $100.Police said a window had been broken and the lock forced.It was not known immediately what was missing.POLICE.Continued from page one Dir.Groulx said.He noted that only one objective was not met.This was the publication by MUC police of a handbook of Westmount municipal by-laws which the city considered priority by-laws (see story Jan.27, 1983).The police director said he hoped the booklet would be completed soon.During the year, he said, three patrol cars maintained their regular patrols in Westmount Let's talk.b'HE THE RRSP SPECIALISTS.AND WE CAN PROVE IT.Maybe you're missing out on an RRSP opportunity.Place Ville Marie 397-7000 es Montreal Trust THE RRSP SPECIALISTS.PPYYTL IS EYPYNŸ CSN NIUE YS VE ER ME EE ATA PC EP OR PME EE SC rn * Sexual crimes in 1982 include rape cases.In 1983, rape cases are classified under assault following changes in the criminal code.Above statistics pertain to Westmount sector only and do not include those relating to the local station\u2019s St.Henri sector.along with another two in St.Henri.Both sectors benefitted from the specialized.patrols provided by 12 other marked and unmarked cars.The station's 1984 budget is $4,103,279, he said, of which $3,947,411 is earmarked for salaries.In 1983, the station paid about $110,000 rent to the City of West- mount for the premises at 21 Stanton street.The station recorded 2,488 hours of overtime, down from the total in 1982.The total of 26,310 emergency calls relayed to radio cars covering both Westmount and St.Henri represents a 3.12 percent decrease from the previous year.About half the calls are for Westmount, Dir.Groulx said.More than 13 percent are false burglar alarm calls.\u2018We're trying to cut down the number of these false calls,\u201d he said, noting that less than one percent of the year's 3,561 alarm calls were \u2018\u2018for real.\u201d Man, 66, dies on sidewalk An attempt by police to save a man's life Wednesday last week was in vain.Cst.Pierre Giguére, who was walking the beat on Greene avenue shortly after 3 pm, rushed to the assistance of a 66-year-old man believed suffering a heart attack.Firemen and Urgences Sante personnel also arrived on the RR ; J gin : | p 2 2 ENT\" mes ST P\u2019S You can shop around to find one that\u2019s right foryou.or you can .call us instead.ency Truly personalized financial planning.4480 Côte de Liesse, Suite 311, Ville Mont-Royal Québec H4N 2R1, tel: (514) 341-3531 HE Don't forget to call police Residents are being asked to call police for all incidents of crime including items such as break-in attempts.Westmount\u2019s police director Michel Groulx says he is concerned when he hears that attempted breaking and entering incidents are considered unimportant.\u201cIt is imperative that all such cases be reported directly,\u201d he said.One reason, he said, is that they might provide a missing link to the solution of others.It might also be one of a rash of similar incidents.It is through the recording and investigation of all incidents that crimes can be solved, he explained.An attempted break-in might provide evidence to solve others with similar modus operandi, he said.Now that all cases are computerized, one isolated case in Westmount might be linked with others in neighboring communities.Unsolved files can be reactivated and solved months later when the missing piece is found, he said.scene almost immediately, but efforts to revive the man were unsuccessful, police said.The incident occurred in front of 1336 Greene where the man had been walking alone.A passerby alerted the constable that someone had fallen on the street. « UN Local seniors hear MNA Richard French By ROB SOUTHCOTT Westmount senior citizens had a chance last Thursday to find out just how they are represented in the National Assembly.Richard French, the Liberal MNA for Westmount, was the guest speaker at a luncheon of the Westmount Senior Citizens\u2019 Centre.In explaining some of the aspects of his job, Mr.French pointed out speaking in the National Assembly made him a bit nervous.\u201cWhen you get up, you know there are 50- or 60,000 people listening to what you have to say,\u201d said Mr.French, noting the average size of the audience watching the televised coverage of the National Asssembly.When he would get up to speak, explained Mr.French, it was often with his constituency in mind.\u201cI try to point out to the government where it is letting down the citizens of Westmount,\u201d he said.Mr.French noted there is a theatrical side to politics, which sometimes makes politicians look more adversarial than they really are.\u201cSome Péquistes are very nice and some are not.It's like anything else in life, there are some people I detest and some who detest me,\u201d he said, adding that even opposing MNAs try to get along so some work gets done.\u201cIt's not a good way to run a government to have people hating each other.\u201d $35,000 per year Another image Mr.French wanted cleared up was \u2018\u2018the general assumption we (MNAs) are all very well paid.\u201d He explained MN As receive $35,000 per year, an expense allowance of an additional $7,000, and have free lodging in Quebec City and free transportation to and from their ridings.\u201cMy wife would be very happy if I went back to what I did before entering politics,\u2019 said Mr.French, referring to the greater financial benefits he could receive as a business professor at McGill University.Commenting on the future of both his party and the PQ government, Mr.French said Liberal supporters had to be cautious against being too overjoyed by the party's present standing in the polis.As for the PQ's future, he forecast a change on the horizon.\u2018I think there is every likelihood Mr.Lévesque will find pressure to resign in 1984.I don*t know if he will, though,\" said Mr.French, adding he did not foresee a provincial election being called until 1985, when the economy reaches full recovery.Mr.French also fielded a number of questions on provincial matters.On Bill 40, the government's proposal to reorganize education in Quebec, he proposed increased resistance.\u201cWe should make Laurin sit Man, 70, slips \u2018on sidewalk A 70-year-old man was taken to hospital Jan.12 after he slipped on a patch of ice on the sidewalk in front of 4998 de Maisonneuve boulevard.Police said the man, who appeared intoxicated, had been walking out of the Château Maisonneuve when he slipped on ice on the south sidewalk.He was taken to the Reddy Memorial Hospital by police car 23-2 suffering cuts and bumps to the head and face and complaining of a sore left foot.The victim, who lived in Longueuil, fell about 12:55 pm.Richard French at Westmount Senior Citizens' Centre through every briefing if we have to,\u2019 said Mr.French.\u2018Maybe we can't make him change his plans, but we can make him suffer along the way.\u201d The press also came under attack as Mr.French agreed with a member of the audience who said The Gazette's coverage of provincial affairs was poor.\u2018\u201cThe fact is The Gazette does not give much space to what is happening in Quebec,\u201d he said, adding coverage of non-political provincial matters was better in francophone newspapers.Mr.French noted there was little he could do without being accused of being partisan.\u201cWhen I plead this, they think I'm talking for Richard French,\u201d he said.pC + Ceara av ts 1 6 Lad The Westmount Examiner, Thursday, January 26, 1984 - 11 Magic of the mail on stage Charing Cross Road by Helene Hanff, at the Centaur Theatre until Feb.5.Starring Linda Sorensen and Graham Harley.* * + We don't do much by mail anymore.Sure, we write the odd letter, pay bills and send Christmas cards, but we don\u2019t conduct relationships by mail in the way it was done when postage was cheap, the mailman reliable and telephones less ubiquitous.As postal service has deteriorated, we've demanded things be done faster.Thus we don't as often write and mail invitations or thank-you notes or order goods and pay for them by mail.What we might be missing in this whirling, wired-up world of ours is the type of wonderful relationship built up by New York writer Helene Hanff and a frightfully British bookstore, Marks and Co., at 84 Charing Cross road, London, over two decades from 1949.The correspondence between Miss Hanff and the bookstore staff \u2014 primarily Frank Doel but with some others as well \u2014 which grew from business-like requests and orders into a special trans.Atlantic relationship.was published as a charming little book over a decade ago and the stage version has been around for a few years as well.Last Thursday, the play opened at the Centaur Theatre and for those who wonder how a series of letters could be portrayed in an entertaining way on stage, rest assured \u2014 this production gives a solid evening of good theatre and all that entails: acting, staging.direction and lighting, not to mention the writing of Miss Hanff and Frank Doel adapted for the stage by James Roose-Evans.Stage divided As one might expect, the stage is divided into Miss Hanff's studio apartment in New York (which is transformed ingeniously in mid-scene when she moves to more modern quarters) and the unchanging bookstore in London.The two main characters are on stage almost all the time but never interact, taking turns writing or reading letters.This sounds like it could be dreadfully boring but the fine acting of Linda Sorensen as Helene and Graham Harley as Frank bring the characters to life for us and the skilful direction of Elsa Bolam and Freddie Grimwood's effective lighting keep the action flowing smoothly between the two separate sets.Just enough other diversion is provided by minor characters in the bookstore played well by Griffith Brewer, Stephanie Daniel, Wendy Dawson, Brian Drummond and Philip Spensley.The audience, like the correspondents, is gradually absorbed into the lives, the cares, the frustrations and the joys of both Frank and Helene.We get as frustrated as they at their failure ever to meet, but in the end one must feel that a meeting would have spoiled it all.There's a certain magic to relationships by mail.This play.and this production, bring that magic to life on the stage and does it well.\u2014DON SANCTON The RRSP Choice The Wise Investor Looks At All The Options.Deciding which way to go with your RRSP is an important investment decision.You have two choices with the Guaranteed Fund.Flexible Central Trust's variable rate Deposit Section offers features which may suit; your investment needs and ideas: | O Maximum Flexibility \u2014 Transferable to other RRSP options at any time.ONo Administration Fees.URate at least » of 1% above our contribution.[| Fixed k.Our Term Section provides you with the opportunity of choosing a guaranteed rate and term for your annual D1 to5 year terms available.DU Competitive rates.D Rate guaran- , teed for term selected.D) No Administration Fees.D Interest com- Regular Savings Account rate; adjusted at the 1st of each month.Olnterest compounded semiannually on June 30th and Dec- | ember 31st.D Minimum contribution $25.00.0 Monthly deposits for easy budgeting.7 56 branches across Canada À j pounded annually on December 31st.J Minimum contribution $100.00.O Transferable to other RRSP options at maturity.DOinstant tax receipts provided for Guaranteed Fund.11° 5 year term RRSP Head quarters Montreal - 1130 Sherbrooke Street West Tel.LECACQI 4825 Sherbrooke Street West Tel.933-1122 LE i i) 12 - The Westmount Examiner, Thursday, January 26, 1984 \u2014 SUHURCH SERVICES \"a He), Une AT THE CHURCH OF YOUR CHOICE ANGLICAN ST.MATTHIAS Côte St.Antoine Road at Church Hill The Rev.M.G.Rowe Priest in Charge Fourth Sunday after Epiphany 8:00 am Holy Eucharist 10.30 am Choral Eucharist CHURCH OF THE ADVENT Corner of Wood and de Maisonneuve, Westmount The Rev'd Eric Dungan, M.A, EPIPHANY IV followed by 8:00 am The Holy Eucharist ANNUAL VESTRY MEETING 10:30 am The Sung Eucharist in the Upper Hall {Church School and Nursery) Church School and Nursery Holy Eucharist during the week: Tuesday 9:30 am Wednesday 8:00 pm: Holy Eucharist 12:10 pm Thursday Wednesday Presentation of Christ in the Temple 10:00 am: Holy Eucharist Stephen A.Crisp, ARCO Organist: Mrs.Martha Hagen Organist and Choirmaster SYNAGOGUE CONGREGATION SHAAR HASHOMAYIM 450 Kensington Sabbath Services Daily Services Sabbath Eve, 4:40 pm in the chapel Sabbath Day: 8:40 am in the main synagogue Sabbath Twilight: 5:00 pm Mon.-Fri., Jan.30-Feb.3, 7:30 am.Evening Services: Sun.-Thurs., Jan.29-Feb.2.5:00 pm.Morning Services: Sun., Jan.29, 8:45 am; UNITED THE UNITED CHURCHES OF WESTMOUNT DOMINION-DOUGLAS CHURCH The Boulevard and Lansdowne Avenue Rev.Alexander J.Farquhar Martha Nell Thomson, Christian Development Coordinator Sunday, January 29 11 am: Morning Worship Sermon: What's a Life For?(Read Micah 6:1-8 and Matthew 5:1-12) Rev.A.}.Farquhar preaching Church School Coffee Hour Crib Corner Choir Directors: Richard and Carol Hague Organist: Sandra Mangsen WESTMOUNT PARK CHURCH Lansdowne Avenue and de Maisonneuve Blvd.Rev.].E.Munson, BA, BD, M.Div.Sunday, January 29 11 am Morning Service Sermon: The Magnitude of Love The Rev.J.E.Munson preaching Social Hour Crib Corner Andrew Bourne, ARCT, Organist and Choirmaster ST.ANDREW'S CHURCH 101 Céte St.Antoine Road Rev.Bob Hussey, BA, BD, STM Sunday, January 29 11 am Morning Worship Sermon: A Shared Ministry Rev.Bob Hussey preaching Crib Corner Coffee Time at Noon Margaret de Castro, BMus, MMus, Organist and Choirmaster ALL ARE WELCOME DF OGTR: 1-800-268-6362 OPERATOR 509 Beautiful all-occaston greeting cards.personalized stationery and unique giftideas all of these await you in our free colour brochure featuring the new UNICEF collection Just call the toll free number « 2 AN untcef [| a ENN mers à Initiation des enfants au sacrement du pardon Lorsque vous avez fait baptiser votre enfant, vous vous proposiez qu'il fasse une expérience de vie chrétienne.Cette année, sa catéchèse lui présente le sacre- .ment du pardon.Si vous en exprimez le désir et si vous en faites i la demande, il peut faire une ren- contre privilégiée avec le Christ dans ce signe de la réconciliation ou sacrement du pardon (que l'on appelait confession).Pour que votre enfant se prépare adéquatement à ce sacrement, votre participation est indispensable.Cette préparation ne sera valable que dans l\u2019implication directe et constante de chacun de vous.Nous croyons que rien ne demande plus d'attention et de présence affectueuse que l\u2019éveil de la conscience d\u2019un enfant et la formation de son jugement moral, parce que l\u2019on touche ce qu'il y a de plus délicat et de plus précieux: sa liberté, qui est à former.Il n'y a pas de véritable amour humain se nardon et réconciliation.Les professeurs prépareront certes les enfants par une catéchèse appropriée, un prêtre les rencontrera pour la préparation à la démarche sacrementelle, mais il est entendu que cette démarche doit être vécue dans le milieu familial.Personne ne peut remplacer votre intervention.Les parents qui désirent que leur enfant soit initié au sacrement du pardon et reçoive ce sacrement à la paroisse Saint-Léon devront se présenter à Rubin fund helps campers Eight young immigrants from the Soviet Union are to attend the Y Country Camp this summer through the generosity of Ina André, in memory of her parents, Nora and Joe Rubin, late of West- mount, according to the YM- YWHA & NHS of Montreal.Each of the eight children arrived in Canada from Russia with his | family within the last three years and none could afford to go to summer camp this year without a gift.Mrs.André, establishing a scholarship fund.has made it possible for these children to attend the Y Country Camp at Huberdeau.Mr.Rubin immigrated to Canada from Russia with his parents in 1905, when he was two years old.He served as chairman of the campaign created to build the camp in 1962 and with his wife Norah devoted countless hours to other community activities and fund-raising.Beginning his career as a telegraph operator with the Canadian Pacific Railway, he later founded his own company, National Typewriter Inc.in 1927.The Y also makes available a limited number of scholarships to the camp, which accommodates i 700 children each summer.une soirée d'information et de préparation.Le mercredi ler février a 20 h (au sous-sol de l\u2019église Saint-Léon, 310 avenue Clarke.Lors de la réunion, nous vous remettrons un billet d'inscription que vous voudrez bien remplir et déposer à la fin de la rencontre.Avec vous, nous souhaitons partager sur le sens de ce signe de la réconciliation, et souhaitons que votre enfant reçoive ce qu\u2019il y a de meilleur, afin qu'il devienne adulte dans sa vie humaine et dans sa vie de foi.Cette semaine Dimanche, le 22 janvier, à l\u2019occasion de la semaine des vocations, il y aura une homélie témoignage par Laurier Tremblay, séminariste qui vient à la paroisse Saint-Léon pour son stage pastoral.Mardi, le 31 janvier, une rencontre du Groupe Adulte et Foi est prevue sur le thème de la prière, à 19h30 au salon du presbytère.Mercredi, le février, les parents qui demandent pour leurs enfants la préparation et l'initiation au sacrement du pardon se réuniront à 20 h à la Salle Saint-Léon, au sous-sol de l\u2019église.Vendredi, le 3 février, comme chaque mois, le premier vendredi du mois, vous êtes bienvenue à une célébration communautaire du pardon, à 19h30 à la chapelle, 336 avenue Clarke.À l'occasion de cette rencontre, nous soulignerons dans la prière la nouvelle appellation de la chapelle des mariages.Le bas- relief en marbre du rétable représente Marie-Reine-des- Coeurs et St-Louis-Grignon-de- Montfort.Le retable avait été offert, dit-on, suite à un voeu.À l'occasion du centenaire de l'arrivée au Canada des disciples de ce Saint Fondateur, comme nous avons la joie d\u2019avoir dans la paroisse (place de Ramezay) une communauté des Soeurs de la Sagesse, c'est un joie de souligner cet événement et de donner à la chapelle le nom qui lui revient: chapelle Marie-Reine-des-Coeurs.Cette fin de semaine, le semainier ainsi que les reçus pour fins d'impôt seront distribués.Si par hasard une erreur s\u2019est glissée à votre reçu, n'hésitez pas à communiquer avec le secrétariat, 935-4950.Nous nous ferons un plaisir d'effectuer toutes les corrections qui s'imposent.Car stolen during game A hockey fan who went to the game at The Forum Tuesday night last week came out at 10:30 pm to find his car stolen from in front of 370 Wood avenue, police said.The 1980 Pontiac Grand Prix was valued at $4,500.It was reportedly left locked by the owner, a man living in Pointe Claire.Burns program at Park Church Westmount Park United Church, at the corner of de Maisonneuve boulevard and Lansdowne avenue, has arranged a program to honor Robbie Burns following the morning church service Jan.29, and all those with Scottish blood \u2014 or otherwise \u2014 will be warmly welcomed.No Scottish program would be complete without bagpipes, and well-known selections will be provided by piper Eber Carruthers, followed by a sing-song featuring familiar Scottish favorites.Topping off the program will be the presentation of two films produced by the National Film Board.The first, The Fiddlers of James Bay, tells the story of how fiddlers from the Orkney Islands came to teach fiddle playing to the people of James Bay, and how later the James Bay fiddlers returned to the Orkney Islands to give a concert.The second film is a lighthearted animated film called Mr.Frog Went A-Courting.This is to be a box-lunch gathering, but tea and coffee will be provided, as well as Scottish shortbreads.New members at St.Andrew's Mr.and Mrs.David Webber and Mrs.Laurie Ogilvy, all residents of Westmount, are to be welcomed into the St.Andrew's Church family on Sunday, which is new members\u2019 day.The new members, identified by white carnations, will be welcomed by the congregation at coffee time, following the morning service.Last Tuesday evening, the senior class of St.Andrew's Church School joined with their counterparts from Dominion- Douglas Church for an interesting tour of CFCF-TV studios, followed by supper.A great time was had by all.On Tuesday evening of this week, the worship committee has invited the worship committee of Dominion-Douglas Church to join with them at their regular monthly meeting.It will be a time for sharing of ideas and fellowship.Popular corner for crashes Westmount's most accident- prone intersection in 1983 chalked up another traffic accident Saturday when a car hit a bus at 2:10 am, police said.A blue 1981 Toyota apparently hit the rear of an MUCTC bus on Sherbrooke street just west of Victoria causing damage up to $500.No damage was reported to the bus which had been travelling east, in the same direction as the car.Police said the driver of the cara 22-year-old Quebec City resident, didn\u2019t stop in time.The Church of St.Andrew and St.Paul (The Presbyterian Church in Canada) Sherbrooke Street West at Bishop SUNDAY, JANUARY 29, 11 AM Church School and Créche Sermon: Mr.Burns A BELIEVABLE GOD 4 pm CHORAL CONDUCTOR'S CONCERT Director of Music: Wayne Riddell Have you considered \u201d) PRE-ARRANGEMENT to relieve others of decision?Funerals, cremation and cost information available without obligation by calling D.A.COLLINS INC.5610 Sherbrooke St.W.484-1149 POINTE CLAIRE: 222 Metropolitan Blvd.- 695-4200 Lu 1 oe we NW eV eA wm «© 1 first and second floors: Motosport Plus Inc.(Honda City Ltd.) motorcycle sales and service; January 18 4134 St.Catherine: Imprimerie Kwik Kopy, instant printer centre; 4150 St.Catherine, suite 505: Kerr Steamships (Canada) Ltd., steamship agency; 4614 St.Catherine: Wine & Dine Publications Enr., office for publication and tasting room; Alexis Nihon Plaza, fashion floor Occupancy To Permits \u2018he following occupancy permits FOI6: Brazilia Unisex Inc., boutique; were issued at city hall in the past Alexis Nihon Plaza, Alt.1, center mall: two weeks: Promotions Alexis Nihon Inc., promotion (jazz, aerobic dance, Jan.26-28); Januar y 10 Alexis Nihon Plaza, all levels: Promo- 4010 St.Catherine, basement, ground.tions Alexis Nihon Inc., sidewalk sale 486-3680 486-1211 Labreche, Lamarre, Meury NOTAIRES * NOTARIES 6575 Somerled, Suite 4 Montreal H4V 1T1 Me Albert Labrèche, BA, LLL Me Suzanne Lamarre, DEC, LLL, DDN Me Guy Meury, BA, LLL HARMACIS H.GOLDENBERG, B.Ph.L.Ph.Pharmacien/Pharmacist 4451 St.Catherine St.W.at Metcalfe Hours: 933-1155 wife 8:30 am-6 pm Saturday ADVANIAGES OF A SELF-DIRECTED RRSP Call Michael A.Dawes Lévesque Beaubien Inc.INTERNATIONAL INVESTMENT BROKER 360 St.Jacques St.W.879-2286 Res.932-8839 Clinique Pour Douleur Demaisonneuve emaisonneuve Pain Clinic 2100 rue Guy, Suite 209 Montréal, Québec H3H 2L8 937-7931 Mme E.Del Vecchio/Gérante PHILIP MAGDER, P.S.W.CONSEILLER EN PLANIFICATION DE CARRIÈRE PROFESSIONAL CAREER CONSULTANT ° determination of career objectives ® preparation of tailored resumés ¢ development of sound marketing strategies ® simulated interviews 2055 Peel, Suite 1100, Montreal H3A 3B8 849-2137 HUGH SAVAGE and COMPANY Chartered Accountants 1310 Greene Avenue, Suite 200, north of de Maisonneuve 937-9227 (Jan.11-14); 4823 Sherbrooke, suite 275: Produc- \u2018The following building permits were issued at Westmount city hall during the past week: January 18 19 Parkman place: for S.Clement by Pyroair Ltée.to convert oil furnace to gas, $3,500; 61 Bruce: for M.Brodsky by Central Plumbing and Electric to convert oil furnace to gas, $2,500; 649 Cote St.Antoine: for Mr.Gilani by Central Plumbing and Electric to convert oil furnace to gas, $2,700; January 19 4912 Sherbrooke: for Audiotel by DLR Reg\u2019d., alterations, $10,000; 4998 de Maisonneuve: for Creccal Trust Co.by L.J.Gagnon Inc.to convert two 00 TL 00 Ti M0 0 Th $500 TBS Ta $9 Tn 60 Ty SN Wl - I.sound pearly While you scrub?It's not the voice It's just the tub.JOHN WATSON (Quebec) Limited PLUMBING AND HEATING CONTRACTORS 24-HOUR SERVICE 366 Victoria Avenue, { Suite 7 / 487-1760 FS Ta 88 We 66 TW 06 Ta $5 WSFA 0 The $9 Wy 80 Wn $4 ~ CHRISTIE PLUMBING LIMITED complete plumbing service FAST\u2014EFFICIENT RESIDENTIAL COMMERCIAL INDUSTRIAL 24-HOUR SERVICE 484-2010 5831A Sherbrooke W.AT STS Wy, SO 00 $0, PE SPST, 0, § PU 79 TW $0 Tp, SF FO, 56 i.© $y, SP eee The Westmount Examiner, Thursday, January 26, 1984 - 13 oil furnaces to gas, $14,000; January 20 4026 St.Catherine: for Super Tube TV Rental by, Mayman Signs to erect a 741 Upper Roslyn: for Mr.V.Cristian by Danis Gumpert Inc.to convert oil furnace and heater to gas, $3,200; 4695 de Maisonneuve: for Westmount Park United Church by T.M.Briggs Plumbing and Heating to convert two Sign, 44,000; 564 Victoria: for Mrs.Usherwood- ; , , ; oil furnaces to gas, $11,000; Bogen by the owner, alterations, 1330 Greene: for Re/ January 23 $800.HOME IMPROVEMENT BEWARE! ® SMOKING FIREPLACE © BLOCKED CHIMNEY © BROKEN DAMPER These danger signals mean your fireplace.chimney or wood stove need the professional @D attention gf a Master Chimney Sweep So dont wait for a tragedy to_happen Call he a TR bn) Chimney & Wood Stove Maintenance Securi-Flamme 489-7871 Max Westmount Inc.by Stanway Signs to erect a sign, Better electrical work our current affair! Contact us for heating conversions, security lighting, alarm systems, residential and commercial electrical repairs, modifications and new installations.BREMER ÉLECTRIQUE 1206 Notre-Dame W.935-1131 ELECTRICAL CONTRACTOR JAMES H.MacINTYRE LTD.es ge D.Gardner, Pres.a # 2 a Mr PLUMBING OR y # & HEATING \u201cSERVICE CONTRACTORS Eslablished 1919 320A Victoriu, Westmount 482-4924/5 AAA A A A AR ELECTRICAL CONTRACTOR 481-0251 FLECAPRIQUE RANCBEC \u2026 electric heating specialist conversion from oil to electric-air, water or baseboard heating DUAL-ENERGY (BI-ÉNERGIE) all types of electrical work RESIDENTIAL- COMMERCIAL - INDUSTRIAL FREE ESTIMATES \u2014 WORK GUARANTEED \u2014 24-HOUR SERVICE AAA FRAN ARIA RI RAR AAR ARAN IAAT RA An HHH RNR ERNE RR, REFERRER DU CLEANING residential and commercial B&D BABIJ & DUGGAN cleaning contractors inc.4795 St.Catherine St.W.933-1935 THE HOME OF YOUR DREAMS LET US MAKE IT COME TRUE ArcurrecruraL DEsiGN Concepts con DESIGN ¢ RENOVATION » HOME INSPECTION ROBERT BRUNET 288-3795 k 4 - The Westmount Examiner, Pickpocketed A pickpocket made off with a wallet containing more than $300 Wednesday last week at the Phar- maprix store in Alexis Nihon Plaza, police report.The theft was believed to have taken place when the victim, a woman, was waiting in line at the cash about 3:30 pm.Thursday, January 26, 1984 Jewelry stolen Jewelry and money, valued at more than $1,000, were reported stolen from a house on Lans- downe avenue Monday last week, according to police.Entry to the house was gained through the basement door, causing $50 damage.The lock had been forced.A SEARCH SERVICE FOR OUT-OF-PRINT BOOKS old\u2014new\u2014hard-to-find\u2014rare No charge for searching * Returnable * Free mailing or delivery Mail your want list or call CHAPMAN'S BOOK SERVICE Box 263, Westmouni H3Z 2T2 932-8621 \u201cry Cl nde bihd ent CLR Red 7e JE S V Lu Lu = 3] P R 0 © R [.} M J a ae PS e Spanish at Salamanca, Spain \u201c48 6 Biking trips in Europe, Las os Slay bY ¥'X - {4 * French at St.Pierre and the south of France M China, Japan Ca * Sailing in Greece, skiing at Zermatt neve LX ® Art school in Florence \"ie ke Drama school at Oxford ® Marine biology at St.Andrews, Grand Cayman and the Great Barrier Reef - hE] Ned ¢ Canoeing and cross country ML in Canada MES © An African safari : Le N° Hockey school in the USSR 207 NEXT PRESENTATION: ES 1094 Greene Avenue, Westmount Wednesday, February 1 at 6 pm RSVP: 482-1462 * 482-6756 84 Yorkville Avenue Toronto M5R 1B9 (416) 964-2569 Beyond Westmount's in the bigger city surrounding us A random sampler of things to see or do Borders by RICK KERRIGAN Armchair travelling Imagine the American West without the hordes of obnoxious tourists feeding the bears and leaving their garbage behind.Imagine vast stands of timber un- threatened by the greed and shortsightedness of the lumber and pulp industry.Imagine clean, wild rivers untamed by monstrous diversions and dams.That was the landscape beheld by Lewis and Clark in their 1804 expedition from St.Louis, Missouri, to the mouth of the Columbia River and that is what Allen King, a wildlife filmmaker and biologist, hopes to recreate for you in the next film and lecture, titled Romance of the West, presented by Explotravel Films Sunday, 2 pm, and Monday, 8 pm, at the Arlequin Theatre, 1004 St.Catherine street east.The second part of the program is about the men who explored the area that is now Yellowstone Park.For his commentary, Mr.King will be dressed in authentic mountain man garb, from buffalo hat to fringed, elk-skin clothing.\"\u201cCowardly\u2019\u2019 students Marianopolis College students are presenting Noel Coward's Private Lives tonight through Saturday, 8 pm, at the college, 3880 Cote des Neiges road.Tickets are available at the door.Find out MISSAIRE-PRISEUR if the Taj Mahal really does look like a biscuit box.Camerata concert Musica Camerata Montreal will be giving a concert Saturday, 5 pm, at Christ Church Cathedral, corner of University and St.Catherine streets.The group will perform works by Beethoven, Morawetz, Puccini, Ginastera and Hindemith.Tickets are available at the door.Even the witch sings The McGill Opera Studio is presenting Engelbert Humper- dinck\u2019s opera Hansel and Gretel Friday and Saturday, 8 pm, and Sunday, 2:30 pm, at Pollack Hall, 555 Sherbrooke street west.It will be sung in English.This production includes a chorus of gingerbread children and the ballets of the witches and the angels.Tickets are available at the Pollack Hall box office Mon.-Fri., 1-5 pm.A little chamber music There will be a concert of chamber music tonight, 8 o'clock, in the Erskine and American Church, corner of Sherbrooke street and du Musée avenue.The musicians include Mary Lou Basaraba, soprano; Carolyn Christie, flautist; Robert Crowley, clarinettist; Margaret Wada, pianist.They will perform works by Spohr, Bottenberg, Copland, Ibert and de Falla.Finalists in concert The finals of the Fourth World Jewish Song Festival will be held Saturday, 9 pm, at the Snowdon YM-YWHA, 5480 Westbury avenue.Of the 12 final songs, 11 will be performed by the writers themselves.The songwriters come from Roumania, France, England, South America, U.S.A.and Canada.For ticket information call 342-0441.Dance the night away The Manoir in N.D.G.is holding a \u2018\u2018folkothèque\u2019\u2019 Sunday, 8:30 pm, at their location at 5319 N.D.G.avenue.This is the same as a discotheque except that you will be folk dancing to music somewhat less frantic than what you would hear at a disco.The evening will include an instruction period of international folk dances and then you can dance your feet off.You don\u2019t need any previous experience to participate but you have to be over 18.For more information call 484-2741.Concert wraps up symposium The Tudor Singers of Montreal and the choir of the Church of St.Andrew and St.Paul will join forces for a concert Sunday, 4 pm, at the A and P church, corner of Sherbrooke street and Redpath avenue.The concert will be under the direction of Wayne Riddell of the Tudors and four guest conductors who have been participating this week in a choral music direc- Butterfield & Robinson Travel EUROPEAN ADULT BICYCLE TRIPS ~ | Franicin Silverstone 1 mem, will sell on the instructions of The Royal Trust Company The Antique, Victorian and Edwardian furniture, oil paintings, silver and silver- plate, porcelain and glassware, jewellery and furs, sculptures and rugs: May-October 1984 from the Estate of Bicycle in style at a very relaxed pace along the tiny back roads of the late Mrs Ethel May McCaffery Europe.Ten-day trips with all luggage transported by private van, removed from and best available hotels.Burgundy vineyards, northern Italy, 1509 She eet w Loire valley, Bavaria, Alsace, southern Ireland and Bordeaux.Also other comsignors est, SLIDE PRESENTATION To be held at January 30 at 7:30 pm, Ritz-Carlton Hotel THE TOWN HALL TOWN OF MOUNT ROYAL For information or brochure contact your travel a - gent or Butter: 20 ROOSE HRs T.M.R, tield and Robinson Travel, 330 Bay St., Suite 1604, Toronto M5H a et 258, (416) 864-1354 19th Century Oak Including: Refectory Table Edwardian mahogany and oak writing desks; a fine giltwood salon suite; glazed showcases, a carved library table; various side and occasional tables; dining room = suite; serving buffets; carved mahogany a._ voyages bedroom suite; marble and wood pedes- A tals; mahogany and oak foot stools; porce- su lain from various factories including \u2014 travel inc Royal Crown Derby, Limoges, Imari, Schumann of Dresden, Crown Stafford- shire; brassware; table lamps, sconces, standard lamps, chandeliers: decorative glassware and stemware; an extensive selection of silver and silver plate including trays, salvers, tea and coffee services; European oil paintings, including works by J.Berry, W.H.Cubley, C.E.de Belle, M.Federico, K.Heffner, C.Leslie, C.Long, J.E.Mcadows, B.Pothast, E.Renard, P.Late 19th Century Giltwood Salon Suite Bernard Poe po A.Nerhacsen; marble, alabaster = elgian [674 a ter Lk pia rugs; Eileen Abr Sigred 0 On C ad od i io een Abrams Mary Katz fur stoles and jackets; lines and lace.PREVIEW Thursday, February 2nd, 1984, 10 a.m.to 9 p.m.(Late night) Friday, February 3rd, 1984, 10 a.m.to 6 p.m.PHYLLIS HEITIN and EVELYN SHRIER TAKE PLEASURE IN ANNOUNCING THAT MARY KATZ and EILEEN ABRAMS MORNING SESSION Sacurday February th at 9:30 a.m.HAVE JOINED OUR DYNAMIC TEAM OF Saturday.February 4th at 2:30 p.m.TRAVEL CONSULTANTS.m3 Bf WE INVITE YOU TO REACH THEM AT ) HOW 4C4 989-1222 (514) 694-6553/4 1310 Greene Avenue, Sixth Floor J) tors\u2019 symposium given by the Feb.26.The watercolors of Review: The Westmount Examiner, Thursday, January 26, 1984 - 15 \\ Tudors and the church.Anatole Goulod are at the Maison fe ; la Culture, 2280 ge Ses .Assautingthesenses Sie \"Lans: COOd Meal and quality theatre Radio Sir George and Concordia University Television are holding a \u201cSound and Vision Bash\" Friday, 8 pm, on the seventh floor of will be shown in Pollack Hall, 555 Sherbrooke street west, from Tuesday until Feb.29 during concert hours at the hall.please in Les Masques\u2019 package Concordia University, 1455 de .Dinner-theatre is a tricky event evening is Bernard Slade's the play flowed well, Maisonneuve boulevard west.WARMis sometimes hot toreview.Should the emphasisbe Special Occasions, directed by nevertheless.be sala ot an faye videos wil The Writers Association for °° the dinner or the theatre?Does Terry Donald and starring This particular dinner theatre one apply the same standards to Bronwen Mantel and Vlasta package makes for an enjoyable and several smaller monitors.The video shows will alternate with a deejay spinning discs for dancing.A local break dancing group also will be performing.Admission is free.Rand B star in concert Rhythm and blues is a somewhat neglected music form these days but if you're a fan of it Romance and Mainstream (WARM) will be meeting Saturday, 10 am in the Fraser-Hickson Library, 4855 Kensington avenue in N.D.G.After the business portion of the meeting there will be smaller group meetings according to the authors\u2019 writing interests.These range from gentle romance to steamy encounters, historical romance and general mainstream fiction.If you would like to join the association or just attend the the meal as one would when eating, say, at Les Halles and does one expect the play to measure up to a production at the Centaur?Les Masques Dinner Theatre in the Hyatt Regency Hotel has come up with a pleasing package that combines a good meal with some quality theatre.Enough thought has been put into the menu and food preparation and into the choice of play and its production to please all but nit- Vrana.It is a play about the absurdities of modern relationships \u2014 a couple who obviously love one another, are tied by the bond of parenthood, but who, for some unfathomable reason, decide they should get divorced.The play begins on the evening of the couple's 15th wedding anniversary, the eve of their divorce.Subsequent scenes follow their relationship through their meetings at various family evening.The price of the package includes dinner.the play, tips and parking.Given the right dinner companions, it is well worth the price of admission.The play continues until Feb.\u2014Rick Kerrigan Thief uses ou'll want to catch the show b i ; i \u2019 ; Junior Walker and the All stars meeting call planet a cons a pickers.functions over the years.victim S scarf 1 tonight through Saturday, 10 pm, 692-9680 Let\u2019s start with the meal.My Michael Ruskin, played by Mr.\\ at the Club Soda, 5240 Park \u2019 companions and I opted for the Vrana, is a playwright and his A 47-year-old Westmount Teh Sod or Tooker tickets at the with Jobster sauce which was ms 15 a businesswoman.They parue hor purse Sunday at ] am after a A Club Sod i ; wi obster sauce which was as 1s a business an.They i ub Soda or Ticketron counters Centaur play extended good as could be expected this far their separate careers but find young man threatened to strangle B d The current production at the from Kennebunkport or Nova their lives somewhat unfulfilled her with her own scarf, police .anas on stage Centaur Theatre, 84 Charing Scotia, While the others chose the without each other A I said incident took ol h - .Cross Road, has been given an ex- veal tenderloin with cream sauce e two actors wor we e 1nciden ook place when / pois West Hill High School Band tended run until Feb 5.The play, and a stuffed wild mushroom for together and make a very plausi- the woman was walking in a cor- ; ane \u20ac © schoo Ear 1:30 Drm in Written by Helene Hanff and the main course, which they pro- ble couple.They seem comfor- ridor at 1 Westmount Square.1 the school auditorium 5851 directed by Elsa Bolam, is an nounced delicious, I had the roast table with their roles.Both have a Someone came up from behind Somerled avenue.The ro ram endearing piece of theatre.Try to prime rib of beef, superbly strong stage presence, a prere- her and tightened the scarf Sr ; : ¢ Prog catch it if you haven't already.repared and succulently tender.quisite for the roles of their arouna her neck, grabbing the will include light classics, Broad- y y prep FE : way and pop medleys and some The accompanying Caesar salad sophisticated yet confused purse and running off toward the : : » .was merely a salad \u2014 good but characters.entrance of the Métro.Jaz.It 15 free but they would ap- Bits'n\u2019pieces not special.The director, Terry Donald, The victim told police two preciate a donation.: For dessert, the women in our does a good job of moving his ac- others were with him.The man 1 FI d .| paie Favernment of Queber is of- group chose the chocolate tors on the small stage.The two was described as about 20 ycars .ute and plano recita ; rses M- cheesecake while the men had a actors and a couple of pieces of old and having brown hair.The n Ç pr .grams From Feb.6 to March 1, pear William mousse in a tulip furniture didn't leave much room value of the robbery was André Papillon will play flute oon t urs.sons 18 nd aller- biscuit and a baked green applein for anything else on the stage, but unknown.f and Suzanne Larin, piano, in a Da ist ve Bei Feb 6 a.Po 1 cognac sauce.We finished with h concert Sunday, 2 pm, at the Bis 1741 de Bi 0 tal 0 coffee and a wafer of dark Maison de la Culture, 5290 Cote Pm.a e Biencourt street.Chocolate.[ pie fe fe fc fe fe fe fe fe fe fe aie fe fe aie fe fr fe af fe de r des Nei d.Th ill .It\u2019s near the Jolicoeur Métro sta- e f form works by Mozart, Haydn, tion.\u2018Nos Amours Unfathomable divorce Early Dinner Special - Bach, Fauré and Poulenc.Admis- Légalisées\" is the title of the talk frathomable divore SERVED MONDAY TO SUNDAY.4 TO 7 PM : I Lome 2 bres) lawyer, Tuesday 12:15 pm ha The dramatic portion of the all three specials served with minestrone or green salad or penne all arrabbiata que d'Epargne.powoa.1355 Do oser for programs for the handicapped Salmon Trout Breast of Chicken Scaloppina wt soe ill be held Saturday.7-10 pm, at à E hibits about town blood donor clinic Monday until oe os Robillard Centre, 1000 Meunière Parmigiana alla Campagnola Xhibits abo Feb.2.10 am to 6 pm, in the come Emile Journault street.1f you RUN\" eee, me a \u201cC'est mon coeur qui de blanc MON room ot the Metonnell want to participate ! assume it is DESSERT: BLACK FOREST CAKE s\u2019illumine et crève brusquement Engineering Building of McGill a question of getting sponsors to VOUR 8775 comme une outre de sang\u201d is the University.pay so much for each length you CHOICE title of a show of paintings by swim.Some expert divers and RESTAURANT L Raymond at Maison de la i i hronized swi will be PARM = ! Culture Marie Uguay, 6052 Monk Swimmers raise money entertaining, A call 1873 St.Louis, St.Laurent ® 744-0214 boulevard, from Wednesday until A swim-a-thon to raise money 273-1713.kde fe fe dde fe fr dde fe fr dde ir dr dde ae air aie ob of fe der + \u2014 REASONABLE PRICES \u2014 - dR a Fully Licensed 51 51 SHERBROOKE W.(corner Vendome) 482-2950 .eh en \u2014 anarsausanne eames mata SE = ADVERTISER TO FILL THIS SPOT! For information call your sales representative or Louise Wolman at 932-3157 \u2014 NTED! k uli COMING EVENTS y | ANNUAL DESSERT BRIDGE The ladies of the Notre Dame de Grâce Women's Club will hold their annual spring bridge on Wednesday, February 8th, at 1:00 pm in the Parish Hall of the St.Ignatius of Loyola Church, 4455 West Broadway.Please bring your own cards.\u2014 treal.\u2018\u2019Open House,\u201d Tuesday, January 31, 1984, 10 am - 4:30 pm, 6:30 - 9:30 pm.5530 Dupuis Avenue.Special classroom tours.Free hearing screening tests.Displays of equipment for the hearing impaired by various companies.EVENING WITH THE MEDIUMS Marilyn Rossner and guests.Friday, January 27th, 7:30 pm.Mt.Royal Hotel, 1455 Peel.Information call 937-8359.SSF.16 - Thursday, January 26, 1984 Blood clinic at Forum Members of the Montreal Canadiens hockey club and representatives of the news media are to take part in the Red Cross blood donor clinic Feb.10 at the Montreal Forum from 10 am to 7:30 pm.Red Cross mobile clinics travel Mrs.RS.Parsons is the chairman.Telephone 486-7138 for turther information.Members and their guests are invited to attend.REGISTRATION Registration for Aqua-Kids will take place Tuesday, January 31st, 1984, at 6 pm, at the N.D.G.\"Y\", 4335 Hampton Ave., N.D.G., followed by a mini-session to be held at 6:30 pm.It is a special program for children who lack fine or gross motor skills.For further information please call: Sheila Donohue, 486-6158, or Quebec Association for Children and Aduits with Learning Disabilities, 861-5518.OPEN HOUSE DEAF AWARENESS Prime object of Mackay Center's (Royal Vale Campus) Education Week sponsored by the Protestant School Board of the Greater Mon- HELP AVAILABLE FULL/PART TIME housekeepers cooks child care nursing companions weekly char full day and 4-hour Demi-Jour service MacCallum DOMESTIC PLACEMENT 484-5142 Lady Macbeth is Westmounter Claire Davis of Westmount, a 13-year-old student at Sacred Heart School, is to play Lady Macbeth in a February production of Macbeth by the Children's Shakespeare Company in Montreal West.Martin Sims will play the title role in the show, directed by Christine Kierans, director of the company.The group was founded in 1981 with five children and now has 25 members.The play will be presented Feb.3 and 4 in the Montreal West town hall, at the corner of Westminster and Avon streets, beginning at 7:30 pm.For tickets, call 488-4005.STOP smoking The Society to Overcome Pollution (STOP), which has headquarters on Greene avenue, is promoting this week, Jan.23 to 27, as non-smokers\u2019 week.STOP encourages non-smokers to stand up for clean indoor air by petitioning for municipal smoking by-laws, asking merchants to display no- smoking signs, petitioning the federal government to ban cigarette advertising and exerting social pressure on smokers.each week to hospitals and other locations throughout the Montreal area to collect blood, but donors may also visit the permanent centre, near the Préfontaine Métro station, at 3131 Sherbrooke Street east.Any person in good health, aged 17 to 65 years, can give blood every three months.Hunger subject of conference World-renowned experts from North America are among those from some 20 countries who have confirmed their participation in the major international \u2018Right to Food \u2014 Freedom from Hunger\u201d conference to be held in Montreal in late May, organized by the Westmount-based Canadian Associates of the Ben-Gurion University of the Negev.The principal purpose of the conference, in which four Montreal universities are to participate, is to focus public opinion on the nature and magnitude of the problems of world hunger and malnutrition.Prime Minister Trudeau and former West German Chancellor Willy Brandt are honorary co-chairmen.Professor Fred Knelman, head of the department of science and affairs at Concordia University and a former Westmounter, is chairman of the program committee.THE at 932-3157.WESIMOUNT Examiner BUS will publish this special section on Thursday, February 23.Your advertising message will reach a combined circulation of 10,000 PAID subscribers, to two of Canada\u2019s richest markets.Be sure that future brides and grooms and the whole wedding party making plans know about you! Contact your sales representative or call Louise Wolman Thin 937-9401 Our door is open.for personalized travel service.CETA Travel 4616 St.Catherine St.West Westmount, Quebec between Metcalfe and Lansdowne Historical association elects Henrietta Harvie By JOAN CAPREOL Henrietta Harvie, of 235 Met- calfe avenue, last Friday was elected president of the West- mount Historical Association, taking over from Annette Wolff, who has resigned because of other responsibilities.Other members of the executive remain the same.Born in Westmount, Miss Har- vie has lived her life here.Her grandfather, Robert Harvie, was one of the first residents, when it was called the village of Cote St.Antoine.Her father, Dr.Robert Harvie, was president of the Westmount Historical Association in 1948.Miss Harvie retired in 1977 after eight years as co-ordinator of the family care program at Douglas Hospital.She has had a long and colorful career.Educated in Westmount schools, she started out as a kindergarten teacher and worked for the Protestant School Board.At the same time she did voluntary social work in a settlement house in Point St.Charles.Miss Harvie then became director of women\u2019s and girls\u2019 work at the old Tyndale House in Little Burgundy and ran its summer camp for eight years.She got her social work training at McGill University and, as a district supervisor, had a total of 14 years in family welfare, including one year in London, England.She was supervisor and coordinator of outdoor clinics at the Montreal General Hospital for more than seven years.She went to the Douglas Hospital after more than four years as director of planning for United Red Feather Services.In 1977, the year she retired, CALL TODAY! ADVERTISING DEADLINE FEBRUARY 16 at 5 PM.Miss Harvie was recipient of the Roberts award of merit in recognition of outstanding contribution to patient care from Douglas Hospital.Miss Harvie was the first president of Prospect-Belvedere Services Corporation and a member Henrietta Harvie of the Board of Directors until 1982.She is a member of the Zonta Club of Montreal and an elder in St.Andrew's United Church.She likes to travel and has made five trips to Australia to visit her brother, Donald Harvie, and her sister, Mrs.S.H.Dawson.oie end oi +» » QG wedding supplement designed as a planning/ shopping guide for engaged couples and their families.| li § Dinner honors Lord Sieff Lord Sieff of Brimpton, OBE, chairman of the international board of governors of the Weizmann Institute of Science at Rehovot, Israel, and chairman of Marks and Spencer, is to be guest of honor at a gala dinner June 12 at the Ritz-Carlton Hotel.Charles Bronfman, of West- mount, is tribute committee chairman for the evening, organized by the Canadian Society for the Weizmann Institute of Science.Robert E.Connolly is one Lord Sieff of Brimpton of three sponsoring committee co- chairmen.Lord Sieff is to be recognized for his outstanding and dedicated service to the institute with the launching of the Sieff Endowed Chair in Neurosciences and Behavioral Research.The dinner will celebrate 50 years of scientific research achievements at the institute.Westmount members of the board of directors of the Montreal chapter of the institute include Gerald Bronfman, Dr.Samuel O.Freedman, Lee Gertsman, Lila Gottheil, Stephen Gross, Mervyn Kerman, Jeremy Reitman, Stanley Silverstone and Irving Teitelbaum.Metals market is club subject Peter Cavelti, president and chief executive officer of Guardian Trustco International Inc., will speak on the precious metals market in the 1980s at the Jan.30 luncheon meeting of the Canadian Club of Montreal.The meeting, sponsored by Clarkson Gordon and held jointly with the Swiss-Canadian Chamber of Commerce, begins at 12:30 pm in the Mount Royal Hotel.surgery® LOOK NATURAL BY VISITING Anna Globes Holl We carry a complete range of True Life Amoena soft'n\u2019satin silicone breast prostheses, Naturelles.Be fitted in comfort in our salon where privacy and discretion is our aim.perce Globes A INC.4972 Queen Mary Road STORE HOURS: Daily 9:30-6, Saturday 9:30-5 La Cache spring show touches the South Seas By JOAN CAPRÉOL April and Chris Corneil of La Cache, 1353 Greene avenue, showed their spring collection to 40 staffers from their Toronto, Ottawa, Kingston, Outremont and Westmount shops on Monday evening.They already had introduced it to employees from their New York boutique.April designed the moderately priced line of 100 pieces, which featured crisp cottons from India and colorful fabrics from Indonesia.Colors were predominately white, coral, putty khaki and silver grey.There were new wave and nautical themes, mother and daughter ensembles and loose-fit- ting dresses.Embroidered styles lent a romantic look to some clothes.A long-waisted rose-pink sun dress was worn with Balinese slippers.A silver-grey camisole top and long skirt showed Japanese influence.Applause greeted Chaplin and Gandhi pants and tropical lily Art society 90 years old The Women\u2019s Art Society of Montreal, now celebrating its 90th anniversary, is to hold a Members\u2019 Day luncheon Feb.7 in the Château Champlain (Caf'Conc) at Place du Canada.Luncheon at 1 pm is to be followed by a special production featuring events, music, costumes and people taken from each 10-year period since the founding of the society in 1894.Members and their guests are welcome.Westmounters Mrs.S.B.Earle and Una Wardleworth are production conveners.Mrs.J.H.Patrick is Members\u2019 Day ticket convener and may be reached at 937-1427.Mrs.G.S.Finnie, the society's archivist, Marilyn Lamont and Muriel MacGregor are researching the production.To commemorate the society's anniversary, Mrs.Finnie also has presented an illuminated manuscript to the McCord Museum of McGill University, according to Mrs.A.Cohen, president.The society also plans to present the McLennan Library at McGill with a $1,000-donation.Other local residents involved with the society include Margaret Craze, Lois Rowe, Mrs.D.Schwenger, Edythe Germain, Alice Lighthall, Eleanor Hreno, Marion Gibb, Kathleen Barry, Ruth Crabtree, Hana Pelnar, Mrs.J.R.Howett and Mrs.H.Gall.dy Capa 731-4191 prints.One lily print dress boasted three pockets at different levels.A white seersucker dress with pastel stripes and an understated look was wash-and-wear and good for travelling.An eggshell seersucker suit with a lined jacket, long skirt and lace blouse was stunning.Mother and daughter ensembles were hand-embroidered with Calcutta roses.There were Hawaiian abstract rayon prints and delicate, cool crepes.A pinafore was worn over a window-pane blouse.A funky jacket with a full skirt was fetching.Shirt dresses were used as coverups over shorts and T-shirts.A navy dress with a Chinese coin batik emblazoned on the back had a hooded collar.A grandfather's shirt topped a straight dress.Hooded tunics, army and sailor dresses, and jean jackets turned up in the collection.Christine Porteous designed the dramatic accessories.Lupus Society meets bilingually Dr.Patrick Tarfey, a nephrologist at the Royal Victoria Hospital, is to be the English guest speaker at a bilingual meeting of the Lupus Society of Quebec on Sunday at 1:30 pm in the Ross Lounge of the Montreal Children\u2019s Hospital, 2300 Tupper street in Montreal.Dr.Michel Léveillé, a nephrologist at Hôpital Notre Dame, will speak in French at the same time in room C-147 of the hospital.Admission to the meeting is free and all are welcome.For more information, call 933-8235.THE EXAMINER reports each week, fully and authoritatively, the news from Westmount city hall and the various municipal departments.The Westmount Examiner, Thursday, January 26, 1984 - 17 re Ca COSMÉTIQUES celebrates '84 WESTMOUNTERS WILL FIND US DOWNSTAIRS AT TERRE ETOILE, LEFT OF THE CHEESECAKE New Year © New You * * a personalized make-up lesson is yours with a $25 purchase of Caprice Cosmetics LIMIT ONE PER CLIENT \u2014 IN EFFECT UNTIL FEBRUARY 15/84 PHONE FOR APPOINTMENT S 7 4 4914 Sherbrooke St.W.(Terre Etoile) Westmount 489-0736 TMR Shopping Centre e 1045 Laurier St.W.(Sheeba) 2344 Lucerne Road Outremont TMR 277-7594 738-3771 OUR SALE IS ALMOST OVER! Lagostina seconds: half price All glasses 10% off Shower curtains 20% off Pleatex blinds 20% off All candles $1.25 (reg.1.40 and 1.55\u2014dripless!) PLUS MANY IN-STORE SPECIALS! 357 Victoria Avenue, Westmount F SHERBROOKE STREET 486-6314 EE ____ - The Westmount Examiner, Thursday, January 26, 1984 4460 St.Catheri 1 valid until March 1] save save $1 [SI on DRY CLEANING at Western Valet Service \u201cCleaners for your better clothes\u201d .ne St.West ~N 935-2000 » 933-5434 With cleaning of $5 and up 31.1984 CLIP & SAVE \u2014 ÿ \\\u2014 3 Hi \u201cOBUS FORME\u201d the original orthopedic back rest support 1s a medical device that will give you the proper spinal support in any chair, wheelchair, car.bus or plane.The OBUS FORME is so light weight that you can carry it anywhere.Doctors, Therapists, Hospitals.and Pain Treatment Centres recommend and prescribe OBUS FORME for their patients.The \"OBUS FORME\" offers relief from most pain symptoms and back discomfort .For more information and free brochure : E3 i slawner ORTHOPEDIC AND HOME HE 5713 Côte des Neiges Business Hours: Mon.-Fri.: 8:30 a.m.to 5:30 p.m.J \u201cOBUS FORME\" is guaranteed for the life of the purchaser.ALTH CARE CENTRE 731-3378 Ray Affleck named patron of Arts Westmount festival Raymond (Ray) Tait Affleck, MRAIC, ARCA, the internationally known architect, has been named patron of the Arts West- mount festival, which is being held from Tuesday, Sept.18, to Sunday, Sept.23.\u201cI've lent the festival my support because I believe it is a good idea underlining the importance of the arts in Westmount,\" says Mr.Affleck.All the participants and donors of Arts Westmount will meet Mr.Affleck at a reception in his honor in the Lodge Room of Victoria Hall on Feb.8 from 7 to 10 pm.Arts Westmount president Edythe Germain says: \u2018Each year we choose a different discipline of the arts and invite a well-known personality from that discipline to be our patron.This year we are concerned with architecture because of our interest in conserving the Westmount Station and are fortunate that Ray Affleck has accepted our invitation to be patron.\u201d A busy man, Mr.Affleck is the designer of the beautiful new Alcan building which is causing such a stir in Montreal.Pleased by reception \u201cWe are pleased by the reception of the project by the citizens,\u201d he says.\"We worked on it for four years.\u201d There is a waiting list for organized tours of the Alcan building conducted by McGill University architectural students starting at 5:30 pm.People in- CUSTOM-MADE SLIPCOVERS Buy direct from the craftsman with over 20 years\u2019 experience.Wide choice of quality fab Caya and many more.We also do quality reupholstering and custom made draperies and bedspreads.rics such as Sanderson, FREE SHOP-AT-HOME SERVICE 276-1229 or visit our store: Pierre & Laurent Douville 584 Guizot E., Montreal OUR EXPERT WORK IS YOUR GUARANTEE OF SATISFACTION! (51 next door Fleur de Ville Montreal H3H 1M2 4) 935-3872 (9 Fleur 2) Half hour free parking FLEUR 1845 St.Catherine St.W.de VILLE Fashion vour own arrangements from a wide variety of exotic flowers, at Montreal's first self-serve flower market.STORE HOURS Closed Monday Tuesday WEEKLY CLEARANCE SALE 50% OFF 10 30-6 30 Wednesday 10 30-630 Thursday and Friday 10.30-9 Saturday and Sunday noon-7 pm By JOAN CAPRÉOL Raymond Affleck terested in the tours can register with the corporation and people are allowed to visit the public areas at anytime.Mr.Affleck, a partner in Arcop Associates, is 61, a lean six-foot- two with a casual, friendly manner.He also designed the 80-million-dollar Place Bonaventure, Place Ville Marie, the Stephen Leacock Building at McGill, the Arts and Cultural Centre in St.John's, Newfoundland, and the Life Science Centre at Dalhousie University in Halifax.His firm's practice is widespread across Canada and the United States.It has worked for the pedestrian systems of the World Trade Centre in New York.Mr.Affleck has taught architecture at McGill, the University of Toronto, Harvard University, the University of Manitoba and the Nova Scotia Technical Institute in Garage smoke brings firemen The apartment building at 200 Kensington avenue was checked out by fire crews Jan.14 after smoke of unknown origin was detected in the garage.fire officials report.No fire alarms were ringing, but a tenant called the fire department for an \u2018\u2018electrical fire.\u201d On arrival shortly after 11:59 am, firemen found a slight amount of smoke and an odor in the lower garage, but no cause for alarm was noted.An automatic call for mutual aid help was cancelled at 12:16 pm to firemen in Outremont and Côte St.Luc.Halifax.He has done a fair amount of consultant work for government departments, particularly the National Capital Commission in Ottawa.Mr.Affleck is a member of the Royal Canadian Academy and a fellow of the Royal Architectural Institute.Lifelong commitment \u201cIt has been a lifelong commitment of mine to the art of architecture,\u201d he says.\u2018\u2018That may sound trite, but it is important to me.An architect's work is very visible.\u201d Ray Affleck was born in Pentic- ton, B.C., the son of the late Dr.John Ernest Affleck.He has one sister, Barbara Lois Burrell, who is a librarian with the National Library in Ottawa.He received his Bachelor of Architecture from McGill in 1947.He did postgraduate work in Zurich, Switzerland.He is married to Betty Ann Henley who has her Master's of Social Work from McGill.Mrs.Af- fleck was on the literature committee of Arts Westmount in 1982.The Afflecks have five children ranging in age from 20 to 29.Mr.Affleck's main hobby is a small farm of five and one half acres near Way's Mills, in the Eastern Townships.He is interested in organic farming.During the winter Mr.Affleck cross country skis and in the summer gardens and swims.Police regular dies suddenly A familiar \u2018\u2018resident\u2019\u2019 of police station 23, who frequently ended a night on the town in local cells, was found dead recently in a rooming house on St.Jacques street.Police listed the incident as sudden death.Although the man lived in St.Henri, police called him a local resident \u201cbecause he was always in our cells.\u201d *\u2018He went to court here so many times,\u2019 said one officer, saddened by the news of his death.The man, a 58-year-old war veteran, was found dead bv a friend.Hanging wires Electrical wires were found hanging down from a house at 7 Springfield avenue Jan.13, fire officials report.The wires were not broken, but the main bracket fastening them to the house had been pulled away.The light department was called to attend.VS FABRIC SPECIALISTS 460 St.Jacques, Ville St.Pierre 364-5657 ° 363-1461 rembourrage upholstering estimation gratuite free estimate tars hw Cw ows fa Arts Westmount exhibit features railway station Westmount Station Arts Westmount is holding an art exhibition called \u201cWestmount Station\u2019 at the Westmount Public Library from February 6 to 19.Many artists are sending in paintings, drawings and photographs of the station.\u201cIt's going to be a busy year with the station a continual concern,\u201d says President Edythe Germain.\u201cWe are planning fund- raising events because as usual we wish to offer the festival free of charge to the public.\u201cWe have been invited to take another art show to Rimouski, our twin city, and we will invite Rimouski artists to show their work during the festival again.\u201cOne of the best parts of the festival is that during the long months of planning and preparation, so many get together and form friendships.\u201cWe feel that this is a real boost to the unity of the community.In these few years Arts Westmount has managed to break down a number of barriers and has brought people together.French and English persons, new and old residents, young and old people find art a common language.\u201d André Trudel will be coordinator again this year.Victor Knight, who teaches professional theatre at Dawson College, will be chairman of the theatre committee; Judy Mappin and Judy Knight, the literature committee; Leila Kovacevic, who teaches ballet at the Westmount YMCA, the dance committee; Alex di Meo, publicity, Doreen Lindsay, photography; and Rose Goldblatt and Jan Simons, both professors of music at McGill University, music.Ann McCall will form a committee to direct the art exhibition.Eva Morin will co-ordinate five committees to prepare different aspects of the children's program.A huge tent will be put up in the park for the children\u2019s activities Sept.22 and 23.Mrs.Morin needs volunteers and anyone interested in working on or heading one of these committees should phone her at 935-7641.Artists with paintings, drawings, photographs or texts about Westmount Station are requested to call 932-9329 before Feb.3.Society hosts Magdelenat Jean-Louis Magdelenat, secretary-general of the International Law Association in Montreal, is to speak at the next meeting of the St.James Literary Society on Tuesday at the Faculty Club of McGill University.The meeting begins at 8 pm, but is called for 7:45 pm.For more information, call Allan Raymond, 489-8741.SPÉCIALISTES ALIMENTAIRES IMPORTÉS MARCHÉ ClwŸlie MARKET 4820 OUEST SHERBROOKE WEST, WESTMOUNT e 484-8436 Welcome Wagon bridal party Welcome Wagon-Bienvenue Chez-Nous is hosting a free bridal party Feb.7, at 6:30 pm, for all brides-to-be.By invitation only.the brides and one guest are invited to spend an evening at the Meridien Hotel in Complexe Desjardins where a fashion show.bridal displays, door prizes and gifts for each bride from our sponsors are to be featured.For a free invitation and more information, contact Cyndi, Welcome Wagon bridal hostess, at 331-3674 or 631-5131.OVER 1,200 OF YOUR FAVORITE TITLES INCLUDING CUJO, RISKY BUSINESS, RAIDERS, THRILLER BY MICHAEL JACKSON AND CLASSICS LIKE CASABLANCA AND VY THAT'S RIGHT.YOUR FIRST MOVIE RENTAL WHEN YOU BECOME A MEMBER OF WESTMOUNT VIDEO FOR ONLY $9.95 WE HAVE AN EXCELLENT SELECTION OF BOTH V.H.S.AND BETA MOVIES.REBEL WITHOUT A CAUSE.IDEO W 345 Victoria Avenue in the heart of Westmount Village The Westmount Examiner, Thursday, January 26, 1984 - 19 EXPERT ALTERATIONS BY EUROPEAN DRESSMAKER MOST REASONABLE PRICES Boutique Agnes LADIES\u2019 WEAR 1216 Greene Avenue 989-1032 FREE » COMING SOON! TOOTSIE, WAR GAMES, EASY MONEY » THE MOST FRIENDLY AND PERSONALIZED SERVICE IN TOWN FLASHDANCE ESIMOUNT 481-7910 IMPORTED FANCY FOODS /¢/ ~._- SE SEVILLE ORANGE MARMALADE FREE RECIPES AVAILABLE AT CLEMENT'S STORE SUPER SPECIAL BUY ONE APPLE PIE AND GET THE SECOND HALF PRICE PAIN FRANCAIS MINI BAGUETTES 59.602./175g CHATFIELD-CLEMENT HEADQUARTERS FOR FRESH SEVILLE ORANGES for home-made marmalade For further information please call John Chatfield: 481-2766 or 484-8436 WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES \u2014 PRICES VALID FROM JANUARY 24 to 28 20 - The Westmount Examiner, Thursday, January 26, 1984 ONE-OF-A-KIND CUSTOM MADE DOLL HOUSE e door really opens and closes ® Juxurious carpeted interior ¢ kitchen, hall, 2 bedrooms 482-27 5 after 5 H.GOLDENBERG (METCALFE) SANTE SERVICES SERVING WESTMOUNT FOR 32 YEARS PERSONAL SERVICE Hours: 8:30 am-7 pm daily; 8:30 am-6 pm Saturday FREE DELIVERY CHARGE ACCOUNTS na AY YS TL t Sherbrooke de Maisonneuve auaaig aj|edlap * St.Catherine PHARMACY | 4451 St.Catherine W.CUSTOMER PARKING IN REAR LA FOUMAGERIE 353 Victoria Avenue Westmount 482-4100 WEEKEND PROMOTION FRENCH BRIE REG.1.59/100 g SPECIAL PROMOTION I OVER 150 TYPES OF CHEESE TO CHOOSE FROM Line for The Times Sunday at Buda Books A visit to the Buda book store on St.Catherine street west to buy The New York Times at $1.99 has become a Sunday morning institution for many Westmounters and people from other parts of Montreal.\u201cPeople mill around and it's like a Sunday club,\u201d one patron commented.Since last March, when he opened his book shop, Buda has been discounting The New York Times Sunday edition from $3 or $3.50 to $1.99.Despite the sub-zero weather last Sunday, some customers were Johnnies-on-the-spot at 11 am when the store opened.They made a bee-line across the shop to the left corner where the 150 copies were piled.By 11:30 am, 40 customers had bought the newspaper.By noon, 100 copies had gone.By 1 pm, all had disappeared.\u201cI realize that the majority of my Sunday morning customers just come for the paper,\u201d said Dan Buda.\u201cThe purpose of it all is to make them come into the store.So, if they won't buy a book the first time or the second time they eventually will.Loyal customers \u201cI know that other stores, particularly large book stores and drug stores, have started to discount their Sunday Times, but it hasn't affected my business.My customers are loyal to the store.They like to browse.It is comfortable and cosy here and many have commented that it is nice to have a book store open on Sundays in Westmount.\u201cI get a lot of people from the Hampstead and Céte St.Luc areas.\u201d The majority of the customers are men.They are professionals \u2014 doctors, lawyers and businessmen.They come to get the sports and business sections.Almost everyone buys the Sunday Times for the book and entertainment pages.Dr.Abe Fuks, of Pine avenue, said: \u2018Firstly, the book store owner was rational enough to offer The Times at a sensible price.Secondly, the selection of books reflects the owner's good taste.Thirdly, it is a civilized book store and that is rare in Montreal.I have looked for this type of book shop for many years.One can purchase remaindered books, which is also rare in this city.\u201d Jack Fisher, a writer of business and life-style articles, called himself a book-store junkie.Besides The Times he bought the $15.95 paperback Sub- By JOAN CAPRÉOL tle is the Lord: The Science and Life of Albert Einstein by Abraham Pais and The Clan of the Cave Bear by Jean M.Auel.\u2018Dan Buda is making a valiant effort to survive and merits encouragement from all the people who come to buy The Times, Fisher said.\u2018\u2018We need more entrepreneurship like Daniel\u2019s.Tough times do not last but tough people do.\u201d Actor Norris Domingue comes from Point St.Charles every Sunday to buy The Times.\u2018\u2018I used to buy it for the arts, books and travel but now I read everything and can go through it in a day,\u201d he said.\u2018\u2018I worked for 12 years in New York and can remember that from the '20s to the '30s, the paper cost three cents, five cents and then 10 cents.\u201d After squash Westmounter Herbert Shapiro and William McDiarmid, of the Town of Mount Royal, drop in for The Times every Sunday morning after their squash game.\u201cI like the \u2018Week in Review\u2019 and save the book section for a whole week,\u201d said Mr.Shapiro.\u2018\u2018My wife does Marine club hears Gallery There are many problems facing the shipping and marine industry in Canada which must be addressed to the federal government, Brian Gallery told 1,800 persons in Toronto Friday.The Westmount mayor, who is the senior marine editor in Canada, was guest speaker at the 45th annual dinner of the Marine Club held at the Royal York Hotel.He told the club's members and guests that he hoped many of the problems in the industry might be solved through his editorials and \u201cpersonal efforts with the Canadian government officials.\u201d Mr.Gallery is publisher of two national marine magazines: Seaports and the Shipping World and Canadian Sailings.He spoke about the various problems facing the industry and recommended that: \u201cAI those involved in the shipping/marine industry in Canada should concentrate their efforts to persuade the finance department of the Canadian government that the industry was not one of the fat cats who can afford to be discriminated against every time the government needs money.\" only WE SIT DETTE When family or friends can\u2019t be there, call WE SIT BETTER NURSING SERVICES We Sit Better provides the same personal home care that many of our patients once believed could come friends.skilled nurses and aides, the elderly and convalescing enjoy the comfort, dence of living at home.You will feel secure with We Sit Better because our home heaith care personnel are carefully screened as well as professionally trained.Whatever your home or nursing home health care needs are, from part-time aides to round-the-clock care SERVICES INFIRMIERS NURSING SERVICES from family and With the help of our security and indepen- P.S.: COME IN AND HAVE by aides or registered nurses, we're ready to help.L_ A CUP OF COFFEE ON US! For a free brochure or more information call 482-9090.the crossword puzzle in the magazine.Incidentally, you save a dollar by coming here.\u201d Some people drop in after church.For instance, John Ferrar came in following mass at the Church of Ascension, It takes him an hour to read the book and travel sections.Eddie Singer, of 4300 de Maison- neuve boulevard west, said: \u2018\u2019The service is great and the store is great.\u201d : Westmounter Lise Witten comes because she \u2018\u2018needs a good paper once a week.\u201d She likes the political section, the \u201cWeek in Review,\u201d book reviews and the magazine.Sally Maclachlan likes the book reviews, \u201cThe Week in Review,\u201d the travel section and \u2018\u2018Arts and Leisure.\u201d **My husband or I come every week,\" she smiled.\u201cBusiness has been steady and we are constantly getting new customers,\u201d said Buda.\u2018\u2018Our Christmas was past our expectations.We have decided to expand by opening a children's book section sometime this spring.We have had many requests for this section and all our children\u2019s books will be discounted.\u2018\u2018We are very encouraged by the responses we are getting.The emphasis is on better literature and quality art books.We carry best sellers but the emphasis is on the classics.\u201d Joy star is local actress One of Westmount's own has made it to the silver screens in the Montreal area.Claudia Udy, daughter of John Udy of 4454 de Maisonneuve boulevard, is the star of Joy, a film which opened in four Montreal theatres last week.Mr.Udy was a candidate for alderman in ward seven during last November's municipal election.Garden hose ends car fire A car fire Jan.13 in the garage of the apartment building at 4300 de Maisonneuve boulevard was estimated to have caused $2,500 damage, fire officials report.The fire, which broke out in the dash about 4 pm, was extinguished by the building carpenter but brought out mutual-aid firefighters from Côte St.Luc and Outremont.The call for extra help was cancelled at 4:11 pm when West- mount firemen arrived on the scene and found the fire had been confined to the car and was out, except for some smoldering under the dash.It was completely extinguished using a garden hose and firemen checked out the building.The fire was believed to have started from a short in wiring under the dash.The car, a Volkswagen belonging to a tenant, was parked in the west wing.Fire officials said no alarms were ringing.Westmount\u2019s mayor, aldermen and city officials regularly make themselves accessible for news and background on local issues for the informing of local citizens every week through THE WESTMOUNT EXAMINER.Coker we wi BIER eat.Ne ONCE UPON A TIME: Children's author Gina Calleja visited the West- mount children\u2019s library Monday.Previously an illustator of children's books, Ms.Calleja read from Tobo Hates Purple, her first work as both illustrator and author.She also showed the children examples of illustrations she had done for children's books.Westmounters elected to children\u2019s library The future was looking good for the Montreal Children\u2019s Library as it held its 53rd annual general meeting Thursday last week.\u201cIt\u2019s never dull \u2014 we always have something to challenge our imagination,\u201d library president Margaret Stronach told the meeting, stressing the library must continue keeping up to date with the changes in the environment around it.The meeting heard reports from each of the library's five branches: Atwater, Park Extension, Macdonald House, Pointe St.Charles and Richmond Park.With the branches located in areas of various cultural and economic surroundings, the reports stressed how each branch had tried to adapt its services to the type of children in its community.\u201cWe've been in business for a long time, and we can\u2019t just rest on our laurels,\u2019 said Mrs.Stronach, a Westmount resident.Several other Westmount residents were elected to posts with the library.These included Ami Bard, who will be the new recording secretary, Andrea Burgess, who takes over as correspondence secetary, and Mary Forsey, Charlotte Capombassis and Irene Lerner, who make up the funding campaign committee.Six Westmounters were to continue on the library's board of directors: Anne Baker, Helen Clayton, Joan MacKenzie, and Rose-Marie Asch, also reside in Westmount.The meeting also thanked those retiring from the board.This included Nilda Hillgartner, Nancy Brown and Phyllis Poland, all from Westmount.The library's financial status was shown to be close to the break-even point, with a deficit of just over $5,000 showing up from $114,946 in expenditures.The library took in $109,523 in 1983, with a grant from the city of Montreal accounting for almost two thirds of that and the library's fund-raising campaign making up almost another third.5205 Sherbrooke St.W.comerMarlowe 483-5943 goes?À The Westmount Examiner, Thursday, January 26, 1984 - 21 Clinic breaks violence cycle McGill University's Marital Violence Clinic works with couples in which the woman is battered to break a cycle of violence and create a therapeutic milieu in which basic problematic issues of the relationship can be dealt with.The clinic, a research and training centre established in 1979, adopts a systems perspective in response to the finding that most battered women who seek temporary respite in an emergency shelter want to return home.Many are committed to staying in their relationship.For more information about the clinic, call 392-4356, or 392-4364.TLC.Round-the-clock nursing care in Westmount home for retired ladies and gentlemen.Please call 9 am-3 pm: Mrs.Laporte 933-8770 Evenings: Mrs.Abadi 739-5863 T National Non-Smoking Week Jan.22-28,1984 Join the Majority Be a Non-Smoker STORE-WIDE SALE 3 CLOTHING, LINENS, GIFTS 20-60 070 off 1353 Greene Avenue Cache Cache, 1051 ouest Laurier Le TF LIQUI FASHION IMPORTS FOR MEN & WOMEN Men\u2019s Suits While Supplies Last! RETAIL VALUE UP TO $300.00 $699 Made in Italy Pants $ 199% RETAIL VALUE UP TO $70.00 Shirts Alt Imports Dress and Casual Sheilah Parsons, Patricia Roman and Anne Tyndale.Two new board members, Judith Johnston ® YOUR LUNG ASSOCIATION Lungs Are For Life.$ 1595 RETAIL VALUE UP TO $40.00 Ties 100% Silk 5995 Made in italy RETAIL VALUE UP TO $40.00 NURSING CARE AVAILABLE IN YOUR HOME Medicaide Services specializes in the care of elderly and convalescent patients in their homes.We also provide personal nursing care for those in nursing homes or hospitals.Whether your requirement is for intensive nursing care, for a homemaker or for companion help, our staff is screened, experienced, bonded and available on a full or part time basis, seven days a week, twenty-four hours a day, at the times best suited to your needs.MORE Women\u2019s Blouses © 10° LEATHER SEE 50 Various Styles \u2014 SYNTHETIC FUR ETC.ETC.ETC.RETAIL VALUE UP TO $50.00 FIRST COME \u2014 FIRST SERVED LOUCA DIFFUSION 1181 Ste.Catherine West Between Drummond & Stanley Tel: 842-2656 Our competitive rates are discussed with you ahead of time and Medicaide relieves you of all necessary payroll and deduction responsibilities.For quality and efficient service call MEDICAIDE 849-7701 \u2019 _\u2026-.~ - .22 - The Westmount Examiner, Thursday, January 26, 1984 a Yoho - Outrageous activities the work of 14 WHS grads Members of the Outrageous Club this week consented to grant me an exclusive interview and allowed me a peek at their plans for future events.The founder and president of the club is Angus Duff, the vice- president is Sharon Gaul, the secretary is Christina Antigines and the two treasurers are Marla Stromberg and Robert Hébert.The club has 14 members, all graduating this year, and a teacher- advisor, Ms.Rudzitis.When asked, \u201cWhy 14?\" they answered, \u2018For two reasons: one, because it is one more than 13; two, to be like a family.\u201d The club is exclusive to grads; this is to allow the \u201ctrendsetters\u201d of the school to get hyper once in a while and to promote school spirit, The club's members usually meet at lunch or weekends to do things together.Îdeas for activities come from the members at club meetings, everyone contributing equally.Some of the outrageous activities they plan are: a Santa Claus parade in May, Mr.Rogers\u2019 Day and a Tacky Day.Details are the club's secret.Members count heavily on the element of surprise.Their latest activity was a Bathrobe Day, the subject of this week's photograph.One of their recent activities was tobogganing in Murray Park.By AMANDA BROSS \u201cWestmount High School When asked, \u201cWhat's so outrageous in tobogganing\u201d'\u201d they answered: \u2018Nothing; but it's a fun thing that most 16-year-olds wouldn*t do.\u201d They intend to pass the tradition on at the end of the year.Applications for the position of a president now are being accepted.Their parting words of wisdom: \u201cIf at first you don't succeed, blame it on someone else.\u201d Honor roll Top scores on the honor roll this term are: in grade 7, John Jacobo trav yg 31 COCFPTa De Leon, 90.8; in grade 8, Christina Flavell, 91.0; in grade 9, Gavin Taylor, 91.4; in grade 10, John Tsang, 91.4; and in grade 11, Gayle Colebrook, 93.1.Peter Balfour won a silver medal at the Quebec Games and was named the most valuable player of the tournament.The first house activity, basketball, was a huge success.Grade 7 students were enthusiastic and said it was great fun.A new sports activity this term is the intramural basketball for boys.The interscholastic boys\u2019 badminton team is coached by Mr.McAuley; the girls\u2019 team is coached by Ms.Lumsden.This year\u2019s Winter Carnival is now being planned and organized by the carnival committee.The carnival will be held Feb.15-17 and its head, Van Nguyen.Many thanks to Kathy Oh for her help in gathering this week's material for this column.Wallet missing A wallet disappeared from a purse in an office at 1 Westmount Square Tuesday last week, police report.The purse had been left behind the victim\u2019s desk at 9:30 am.At 5 pm, the woman found the wallet missing.Total amount of the loss was $80.This course 1s also available in French OMEN! GET YOUR FINANCES UNDER CONTROL, NOW.Equip yourself with a practical knowledge of today's financial system.And make the system work for you\u2014all the way to the bank! Invest in OSMOS.OA 15 week (30 classroom hours).high interest course which gives modern women the essential financial facts.OJ What you need to know about stocks.bonds.RRSP's, tax shelters, insurance, estate planning and wills.and more\u2014explained in simple terms relative to current tax laws to help you succeed in the real money world.O Proven and appreciated by over 3.000 graduates since 1977.REGISTER PROMPTLY.Invest in yourself before investing your money.An OSMOS course begins in a location near you shortly.Call 683-0677 or 683-4288 or write to PO.Box 504.Montreal.Que.H3P 3C7.for all the details.Enrollment is limited.so please act promptly.OSMOS THE PRACTICAL APPROACH TO UNDERSTANDING TODAY'S MONEY MATTERS.Selt-Improvement Permit No.749653 OSMOS.AFTER OSMOS.WIN! W.1.N.is Women Investing Now\u2014our all new, 8-week (16 hours) advanced course.Capitalize still further on your financial knowledge.Open only to those who have completed basic FN ITS OUTRAGEOUS: Most students at Westmount High School usually put a on regular clothes before they come to school, but not members of the Outrageous Club.Bathrobes were the order one day recently, and five of the club's 14 members posed for a quick photo.Shown from left to right are Sharon Gall, Marla Stromberg, David Stewart and Andrew Hosein.Below is Angus Duff.Door left open A police patrol found a door left open at a shop on Victoria avenue at 1 am Wednesday last week.Police said they were unable to contact the owner.The door was secured \u2018\u2018as well as it could be.\u201d [ber Lolegs Ransacked Jewelry and money estimated at more than $300 was reported stolen Saturday from a house on Montrose avenue, police said.The home was reported to have been ransacked.COEDUCATIONAL RESIDENTIAL GRADES 7 TO 13 Over 125 years of quality education * complete academic preparation for college and university entrance in a structured and stable setting students successful in Secondary V are admitted to Ontario Grade 13 teacher/student ratio 1:10 supervised evening study full-range music program excellent residential facilities indoor pool, gym, tennis, sailing, equestrian riding, soccer, hockey R.B.Napier, Headmaster, will be interviewing interested students in the Montreal area March 23 and 24 at the Queen Elizabeth Hotel, 800 Dorchester West 861-3511 For an appointment or further information, contact Mr.Napier at the Queen Elizabeth Hotel or at Albert College, Belleville, Ontario K8P 1A6, (613) 968-5726. The Westmount Examiner, Thursday, January 26, 1984 - 23 OPEN HOUSE FOR PROSPECTIVE STUDENTS AND THEIR PARENTS Sunday, January 29 1:30 to 4:00 pm px] MARIANOPOLIS COLLEGE ED 3880 Côte-des-Neiges Road 931-8792 THE PRIORY SCHOOL INC.3120 The Boulevard, Montreal H3Y 1R9 Junior day school for boys and girls from kindergarten to sixth year inclusive.Small classes, awareness of individual needs.Varied curriculum with emphasis on French from the beginning.APPLICATIONS NOW BEING ACCEPTED FOR SEPTEMBER 1984 For more information, please call the Principal: SKATE MATES: Roslyn School chess players travelled to Ottawa Tuesday last week to meet students of Hopewell School in a tournament, but took time out for a little skating.The 41 students involved in the trip, some pictured above, were: Matthew Bell in grade 3, Sean Pattee, Jennifer Moroz, Morgen Louden, James Tempel, Mathew Thompson, Shereef El Shafei, Alex Shingler, David Levenson, Joshua Zangwell, Damion Stodola, Keltie McGoldrick, Jacob Eliosoff, Prosanto Chaudhury and Sunil Patel in grade 4; Paul Simak, Marc Felgar, Jonathan Rotstein, James Anson, Jesse Walker, Jason St.Louis, Emmanuel Trevlos, Elyot Waller and Shawn Millette in grade 5; and Marc Silverman.Neil Aronoft, Romesh Vadivel, Tiki Jarislowsky, David Farrell, Heather Waterston, Scott Bakar, Taj Nahanni, Adi Dagan, Bruce Cuthill, Tarek Sharkawi, Tara Hooper, Debra Israel, Mathieu Walker, Howard Hersh, Stephanie Berger and Robert Denton.Howard Streit, chess instructor at Roslyn, led the expedition with help from Bonnie Pattee, Scott Duff, Brenda Bronfman and Marj Ross.Mackay holds open house Both campuses of the Mackay Centre for Deaf and Crippled Children will open their doors to the public Tuesday next week as part of Education Week in schools of the Protestant School Board of Greater Montreal.The Mackay campus, at 3500 Decarie boulevard, is open from 9 am to noon and from 1 to 2:30 pm.Tours of the campus will be given, including the education and rehabilitation departments.The centre's Royal Vale cam- dition to tours, students\u2019 ac- be administered.pus, 5530 Dupuis avenue, is to be open from 10 am to 4:30 pm and again from 6:30 to 9:30 pm.In ad- tivities and displays, the program is to encourage public awareness of deafness.Hearing tests are to The day at Royal Vale ends with a special revue, produced by students and staff, at 8:15 pm.935-5966 [?the Protestant school Board of Greater Montreal OUR SCHOOLS.STRIVING FOR D EDUCATION WEEK \u2014 January 30 - February 3 EXCELLENCE B seu 0 0 66 6 6 6 6 6 5 5 8 4 | HIGH SCHOOLS Our English and our French schools are opening their doors G to you during PSBGM Education Week.There are good things Pace \" & al oan : happening in our classrooms: strong academic programs, the john Grant 637.3545 r= teaching of French, computer education, sports activities, pro- Lachine 637-2505 C K Fr G M grams for children with special needs, adult education and Lasalle 363-7150 much, much more.Malcolm Campbell 331-9871 ELEMENTARY SCHOOLS Mouni Royal 731-2761 MIND.842-0792 Bancroft 845-8031 Barclay 276-2584 COME SEE FOR YOURSELF! Northmount 731-6481 pediord 5 731-1300 N.D.G.Outreach 487-0892 eechwoo ; R Carlyle 738-1256 options yl 484-2040 Cecil Newman 366-2270 ptions (i) 484-3577 Cedarcrest 744-2614 Outremount 273-3353 Goronation, k 1331799 Riverdale 684-9920 ourtion ar - - Dalkeith 352-6730 So 376-4720 Dunrae Gardens 735-1946 oyal West Academy 489-8454 Edinburgh 486-0981 St.Laurent 331-8825 Edward À | any 213-9000 Sir W.Churchill 331-8781 izabeth Ballantyne - Verdun 766-2357 FACE TEA Bass ot Vezina Alternative 733-2271 Glencoe 331-9843 Wagar 482-9645 Guy Drummond ra West Hill 486-7321 ampstea Herbert Purcell 626-5501 Westmount 933-2701 Keith 363-4461 Lorne 935-0805 Maple Hill 322-7120 For the name and address of the Meadowbrook 637-2101 PSBGM French school nearest you, Mountrose 721-9021 please phone 483-7245.Nesbitt 721-2850 Ogilvie 722-7160 io es iverview - Roslyn 484-5584 SOCIAL AFFAIRS SCHOOLS mene 2603701 Philip E.Layt 489-8201 omerie: - .ilip E.Layton .Summerlea 637-8952 Contact the PSBGM school in your area for details on the Mackay Centre 482-0500 estminster iviti .Westmount Park 035.388 Many planned activities.Mackay/Vale Campus 481-5644 Westpark 684-1418 Shawbridge Youth Centers Willingdon 484-2881 EDUCATION WEEK Montreal Campus 866-8821 Woodland 767-5344 Shawbridge Campus 866-4021 January 30 - February 3 rs same.Ke mt FEI.GE CP ARO PARC RBG IT a 25 VAN AR sass.a oe 24 - The Westmount Examiner, Thursday, January 26, 1984 Local schools mark Education Week Three Westmount schools will open their doors to visitors next week as they participate in the first Education Week of the Protestant School Board of Greater Montreal.The week is happening at a strategic time as parents prepare to register their children in schools for next fall and as the Quebec government holds hearings on Bill 40, its controversial legislation to reform the educational system in the province.\u201cIf you are on the eve of upheaval, you need to assert yourself,\u201d said PSBGM Director- General Marcel Fox at a press conference last week.\"If the Minister By ROB SOUTHCOTT of Education has his doubts, we want to show him what the board is about.\u201d Though principals in West- mount schools are planning open houses and other activities for the week, they do not all see Education Week as having such political overtones.\u201cI think of it more in terms of getting new pupils,\u201d says Barbara McKnight, principal of Roslyn School.\u201cWe've always had one (an open house), so we like the idea.Having it right now is because registration for new pupils is coming in February and parents are deciding where to send their children.\u201d Miss McKnight says Roslyn\u2019s open house next Tuesday will include an extensive evening program with demonstrations by the school\u2019s chess, computer and gymnastics programs as well as programs of dance and singing.The school will also have a book fair on display, in keeping with the week's theme of \u201cI Love to Read.\u201d Observe classes Westmount Park school will also have an open house Tuesday, with the public being invited to Q 2 Um fon Tris Centennial Academy a coeducational day school and college for students in Secondary I-V and College ! and II scholarships Two scholarships of $1000 each and two of $500 each are offered to students of very good academic standing entering Secondary | (grade 7) in September 1984.Scholarship winners carry their award through Secondary V (grade 11) provided they maintain a high overall performance at the school.general admission Applications for admission, Secondary | through V (grades 7-11) for September 1984 and College | and Il programs in pure and applied sciences, health sciences, social sciences, commerce.arts and letters for January 1984 admission are now being received.Information on bursaries can be obtained from the Headmaster.general admission test date: March 3, 1984 For further information B.S.Stevens, Headmaster, Centennial Academy 3641 Prud\u2019homme Avenue, Montreal H4A 3H6 481-7714 Ministry of Education permit 749701 = PA MOVING THOUGHTS: Students of Hopewell School in Ottawa, in grades 1 to 8, were surprised by the prowess of visiting Roslyn School students, in grades one to six, during a chess tournament last week.Heather Waterston, left, and Keltie McGoldrick were part of the Roslyn team, which won 94-17.observe classes during the day on Tuesday and Wednesday.The school will have a program Tuesday night, which will include an art and drama display as well as several other demonstrations.Principal Richard Jack says the school has had such open houses in the past, and the basic difference this year is in the timing, not the board\u2019s politics.\u201cIt was just an effort to coordinate the whole thing,\u201d says Mr.Jack.\u201cI just think nobody thought of it before.\u201d So is the week really to fight Bill 40?\u201cI honestly don't think so,\u201d says Mr.Jack.\u201cIf it had to do with that, it might have started three years ago.\u201d At Westmount High School, Principal Gary Thompson sees the effort as bringing the issue of reform into a more local context.\u201cIt's easy to publicize the concerns of education like Bill 40.We're saying the system is moving along quite well, whole-scale reform is not the answer and the system which is in place is a good one,\u201d says Mr.Thompson.Mr.Thompson says his school will be \u2018\u2018tooting our own horn\u201d with a variety of events on Wednesday.This will include tours of the classes Wednesday afternoon and displays by at least 20 of the school\u2019s clubs and classes from 7 to 9 pm Wednesday evening.There also will be three informal discussion groups convened during the evening, where parents, teachers and students will be invited to participate.These discussions will deal with educational structure, curriculum and discipline.Wallet cleaned A Westmount man told police his wallet disappeared Monday last week after he forgot it on the counter of a dry cleaning shop on St.Catherine street near Wood - avenue.The wallet contained $45 and was gone when the man, a resident of Argyle avenue, returned to get it five minutes later.SAINT-LAURENT HIGH SCHOOL a public school that is different Saint-Laurent is a small junior high school specializing in instruction in French to English-speaking students FEATURES total French immersion strong math program high academic standards emphasis on discipline computer training easily accessible by bus or metro @ LOWER CANADA COLLEGE An independent day school for boys, founded in 1909 A non-subsidized education institution declared in the public interest by the department of education of the province of Quebec and consequently able to accept applications without legal restriction ENTRANCE APPLICATION DEADLINES FOR 1984-1985 GRADES 5, 6, 7, 8\u2014 FEBRUARY 3, 1984 GRADES 3, 4, 9, 10\u2014MARCH 9, 1984 Applications for Grades 11 and 12 are also being accepted at this time, and entrance into these grades is by personal interview.In order to graduate, it is necessary for students to meet successfully the requirements for the Lower Canada College Certificate of Graduation.In addition, students must write the high school leaving examinations held under the authority of the Minister of Education.All prospective high school students and their parents are invited to an OPEN HOUSE at 880 Cardinal St., St.Laurent 2:30-5:00 and 6:30-9:00 pm FURTHER INFORMATION WILL BE AVAILABLE For complete information, please phone 482-9916 JUNIOR SCHOOL (Grades 3-7) SENIOR SCHOOL (GRADES 8-12) AT THE SCHOOL (elementary permit #749768) {declared in public interest) P.A.KEYTON, M.A.T.G.H.MERRILL, M.A.- Director of the Junior School Headmaster 331 8825 4090 ROYAL AVENUE, MONTREAL H4A 2M5 A PSBGM SCHOOL CECM enrolls new students The compulsory enrolment of students who are to attend a school of the Commission des Écoles Catholiques de Montréal for the first time in September will begin Monday and continue until Friday next week.Parents should report to the CECM school in their district between 9 and 11:30 am or between 1:30 and 4 pm, bringing the child\u2019s birth certificate, and, in the case of English schools, the child\u2019s certificate of eligibility to English schooling.Registrations also will be taken at the CECM admissions office, 3737 Sherbrooke street east, on Friday evening and Saturday morning next week, but students who register at the schools are given priority.Children to be registered in kindergarten must be five years old by Oct.1; grade ! students must be six years old by the same date.Students who are to be registered in French schools but who do not speak French must be registered at the CECM\u2019s Bureau de l'Accueil during the enrolment period.For more 525-6323.information, call Two accidents hit-and-run Two hit-and-run accidents were reported here Sunday, one on Argyle avenue, the other on Dor- chester boulevard.Police said a 1983 Subaru was hit overnight Saturday-Sunday near Côte St.Antoine road, causing damage up to $250.It belonged to a resident of LaSalle.The second car sustained up to $500 damage when it was hit Sunday between 8 am and 9:40 am in front of 4282 Dorchester near Bruce avenue.The yellow Toyota was owned by a resident of Deux Montagnes.Courses show pregnancy no obstacle to fitness By ROB SOUTHCOTT The Westmount YMCA is out to prove being pregnant does not mean a woman cannot be fit.For the third year, the Y is offering a course in pre-natal fitness, and now it also is offering a post-natal fitness program.Both are being taught by Bonnie Shore, a mother who designed the programs as a way to dispel myths about pregnant women.\u201cWhen I was pregnant, the philosophy was that women Cadillac hit from behind One car ran into the rear of another Jan.13 on de Maison- neuve boulevard at Wood avenue, police said.The accident occurred about 5:15 pm when the first car braked suddenly after being cut off by a third vehicle.It was hit in the rear.Police said the third car moved over to the left lane to turn south on Wood and did not stop.Damage to the first car, a Cadillac driven by a 44-year-old Hampstead man, was estimated between $250 and $500.The second car, a 1983 Pontiac driven by a 36-year-old man living in LaSalle, sustained more than $500 damage.Scalper nabbed inside plaza A 30-year-old man was arrested recently for \u2018\u2018scalping\u2019\u2019 outside the Maidenhead Pub at Alexis Nihon Plaza, police said.The man was reportedly attempting to sell hockey tickets without a required permit.Police said he was shouting out, \u201cTickets.Anyone need tickets?\" in jazz ° JAZZ EXERCISE for the non-dancer DANCE FACTORY for the best Dance with the professionals! COURSES AVAILABLE All classes open to both men and women * CONTEMPORARY JAZZ all levels \u2014beginner to advanced » AFRO-CARIBBEAN DANCE o PRE-TEEN JAZZ » TEEN JAZZ e CREATIVE DANCE FOR CHILDREN / SC \u2014russee==a== NEW SESSION Monday, January 30 Present this ad and receive a 10% discount upon registration A ARTISTIC DIRECTORS: Don Jordan and Phillip Cole 733-1911 e 733-3617 750 Lucerne Road, TMR EE EE GL should put their feet up for nine months and wait,\u201d says Mrs.Shore.\u20181 thought I'd create something for pregnant women who wanted to move around.\u201d The 10-week pre-natal course has two 90-minute sessions a week, with 14 women in each class.Some of those come once a week and others attend both classes, but Mrs.Shore says the course offers all of them a healthy experience.\u201cIt offers pregnant women a place to come without worrying how to keep up with a regular (fitness) class,\u201d she says.\"It also gives these women a place to go where there are others like themselves.\u201d Not only do the women have a chance to do exercises which are designed for their pregnancy, they have a chance to learn from each other, as there is a wide range of ages and stages of pregnancy in the class.\u2018They vary from \u2018I've just The Westmount Examiner, Thursday, January 26, 1984 - 25 found out\u2019 to those six months on,\u201d says Mrs.Shore, who insists on having a note of approval from all participants\u2019 doctors.She says women who have been physically active in the past can usually handle the course almost up to the time of their child's birth.Those who have not been active are not advised to attempt the course if past the sixth month of pregnancy.Same philosophy The post-natal course is run on the same philosophy as the prenatal course.\u201cThe purpose is to get the mother out after the birth and to get her with other women of the same situation,\u2019 says Mrs.Shore, explaining that most women who have recently given birth are not ready for the pace of a regular fitness class.She adds that most should wait about six weeks after the birth before starting into a post-natal fitness course.The exercises in the post-natal course are more varied and strenuous than those in the prenatal course, but are still cautious.\u201cWhat's taken into account is these women have been through a difficult physical experience,\u201d says Mrs.Shore, adding she tries to help the women become fit for the physical demands of motherhood.\u201cI'm big on arms.A lot of women don't use their arms until they have their baby and they have to carry it around,\" she says.Mrs.Shore says the advantage of the courses is they encourage women to be fit as well as aware of their condition.She says various hospitals offer courses in childbirth, but these serve only to inform and not exercise.Now that the pre-natal course has been running in Westmount and other Ys for three years, some women are finding out about it from friends or sometimes from doctors.Mrs.Shore says some women who have taken it say their recovery after the birth was helped by being fit.Both courses\u2019 best testimony, though, may come from the women who now are returning to the Y.to keep fit before and after their children\u2019s birth.des écoles catholiques de Montréal for the first time in September 1984, must be registered: Monday, Friday, February 3 09:00 to 11:30 and 13:30 to 16:00 at the the list below) important: tudents who will be attending a school of the Commission January 30th through English or French elementary school in your area (For the English Sector school nearest you, If you cannot be at the school during the prescribed times, you may register your child at the Admissions Office of the C.E.C.M., 3737 Sherbrooke Street East (telephone 598-6081) on Friday, February 3rd between 16:30 and 19:30 p.m., or on Saturday, February 4th between 09:00 and noon.However, children registered at the Admissions Office may be placed on a waiting liste Age of admission for kindergarten: STARTING SCHOOL TAKES PLANNING.Register your child Monday, January 30th through Friday, February 3rd.school.consult five years old before October 1st, 1984.Grade One: six years old enrollment in an English e Children not eligible to attend an English school, and not vet able to speak French, may be enrolled in a \u201cclasse d'accueil\u201d at the Admissions Office of the CE CM., 3737 Sherbrooke Street East (telephone 598-6081) The Office will be open from 08:30 to 19:30 Monday, January 30th through Friday, February 3rd, and from 09.00 to noon on Saturday, February 4th TO REGISTER YOUR CHILD ON THESE DATES AT THE C.E.C.M.ENGLISH SECTOR ELEMENTARY SCHOOL IN YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD.CECM Age of admission for before October 1st, 1984 e A certified copy of your child's birth certificate must be provided at the time of registration e À certificate of eligibility is mandatory for LA COMMISSION es DES ECOLES CATHOLIQUES DE MONTREAL SCHOOL NAME ADDRESS PHONE Eugenio Pacellr 7345 Garnier 721-8998 Holy Family 7378 Lajeunesse 272-4206 Francesca Cabrin 6855 Cartier 722-3801 John XXII 1000 Old Orchard 481-2620 Lawrence O Toole 9445 Hochelaga 351 3630 Luke Callaghan 5643 Clark 279-0845 St Brendan 5937 9th Avenue 722-4444 Mother Seton 8000 de l'Epée 279-7105 St Dorothy 8961 6th Avenue 787-6006 Nazareth 5030 Jeanne-Mance 276-3084 St Ed of Canterbur, 6650 39th Avenue 722-8441 St Gabriel 610 Dublin 935-7469 St Michael 3925 Villeray 72591973 St.ignatius of Lovola 4850 Coronation 489-3303 Canadian Martyrs 10125 Parthenar, 288-367\" St John Bosco 6255 Hamilton 767-1603 Frederick Banting 11135 Alfred 322-3651 St Kevin 3850 Dupuis 733-7244 Cerald McShane 6111 M -Duplessis 121 75435 St Monica 6440 Terrebonne 481-8022 John Caboto 3355 Meunier 151-5409 St.Patrick 3711 de Bulhon 842-6621 Leonardo da Vinci 12025 André-Durnas 648-5964 Edward Murphy 6800 P-de-Coubertn 255-0541 Our Lady of Pompe: 9944 St-Michel 388-5595 Emily Carr 7400 Sagard 725-7831 St Alice 10339 Parc Georges 322-9440 Emmet Mullaly ~ 8699 St-Michel 376-7962 Transfiguration 11715 Filion 334-4462 EX PROPERTY FOR SALE PROPRIETE A VENDRE \u2014_\u2014_\u2014 LAKE Memphremagog: Winterized chalets.Owl's Head - Knowlton\u2019s Landing area, lake access.$29,000.- $95,000.Ruthmary Lewis, wz: 26 - The Westmount Examiner, Thursday, January 26, 1984: CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING WANTED DEMANDEES \u2014PHONE YOUR ADS\u2014 10 words $4.00 1-292:5254.ROYAL TRUST 931-7511 15 cents each additional word.\u201cOY BROKER.$2.00 each line heading » .4 PROPERTY 5 Adtakers on duty Monday and Tuesday 8 am to 8 pm, vo PROPRIÉTÉ 2 # 3 Wednesday, Thursday, Friday till 5 pm CARS WANTED DEMANDÉE REGULAR DEADLINE WEDNESDAY 10 AM; TOO-LATE-TO-CLASSIFY 2 PM FOR SCRAP For best service, phone your ads early.ANY CoNDIT ON Accounts may be paid by telephone by Visa or MasterCard, or by cash or cheque at the Weekly Adservice and Ex- : PROPERTY aminer office, 155 Hillside avenue, Westmount; the Monitor office, 6525 Somerled avenue at Cavendish, NDG: Call us for a price WA NTED the St.Laurent News office, 842 Ste.Croix, St.Laurent; the Town of Mount Royal Weekly Post office, 233 Dunbar D&N SCRAP ; ; avenue; or at any branch on the Island of Montreal of the Royal Bank of Canada or the Bank of Montreal.Hydraulic Platform am interested In buy- Advertising not paid in advance of publication is su ject to a $2.00 billing charge.Advance payments without in- 363-6010 ng all kinds of voice cannot be accepted by banks but may be paid at any of the above newspaper offices.- properties.8amto 11 pm No agents 279-7428 PROPERTY FOR SALE APARTMENTS TO LET 93 1 = 1 999 PROPRIÉTÉ À VENDRE APPARTEMENTS À LOUER EE ANNING STRE eo FOR SALE mn momie 3 M N ET COMPLEXE GUY-FAVREAU Beautiful 3-bedroom cottage.Large 5,400 sq.ft.cor- VERMONT, for sale or rent in ner lot.Excellent location, facing park.Hardwood OPEN HOUSE BUSINESS Stowe, time share, mid April.OPPORTUNITIES OCCASIONS Bargain! Owner.488-0807 D'AFFAIRES ] 4 FIREPLACE OWNERS! Earn up to $150 per demonstration of the Shelburne Fireplace Stove \u2014 insert, featured in Time Magazine and the New York Times.Excellent PART-TIME in your own home, opportunity.*No sales experience required.Contact: PETER DAGG ALTERNATIVES 277A St.John's Rd.Pointe Claire, Quebec HOR 3J1 694-7114 OFFICE SPACE FOR RENT 250 to 11,000 sq.ft.Heating, air conditioning, electricity, carpeted, drapes.all included.For information 481-0125 9to5 MODERN Decorated offices from 650 to 2600 square feet, Victoria and de Maison- neuve.pti 1451.OUTREMONT.McNider, large luxurious upper dun'ex, 74, new kitchen, 2 bathrooms.separate laundry room, garage, heating and hot water included.731-4202.DR.PENFIELD.« xceptional 8% in prestigious building, arrangements to client's taste.i or appointment: 282- 9174 9174 (oftice hours).THE 4300 4300 de A'auisonneuve, 3V room sublet ava: :bie immediately.937-7390.\u2014\u2014\u2014 AE epee floors.New carpeting.Must be seen.Très joli cottage avec 3 chambres à coucher, superbe terrain de 5,400 pi.ca., excellent emplacement face au parc.Doit être visité.Christophe Folla 364-3315 IMMEUBLES CLODEM 9517 boul.LaSalle , .+.364-3315 APARTMENTS TO LET APPARTEMENTS A LOUER PORT DE MER 1 Place yrs uite 20 ngueuil 679-6010 42-54 TOUT À L'INTÉRIEUR e métro e dépanneur sur place * magasin au métro et au centre-ville e stationnement * luxueux * sauna-piscine e antenne communautaire\u2014chauffage\u2014 eau chaude\u2014taxes incluses salon de coiffure * salon d'esthétique PLUS » logements à deux niveaux * salle a diner au premier et chambre en bas tranquillité * vue magnifique sur le fleuve Heures de bureau: 9h à 20h du lundi au vendredi 13h à 17h les samedi et dimanche BRIGHT, spacious.luxury 3% - 41% apartment, heated, fridge, stove, near bus stop and Rockiand Shopping Centre.2445 Sunset.corner Cote-de-Liesse.Call Vicky 733-9818 from 12 to 20 pm.DOWNTOWN.for rent 5%, $395.Large redecorated apt.in beautiful ly maintained elevator building.Immediate, 1245 St.Marc apt.5.739-5229, 483-3293; 937-1247 or 937-2972.; THREE FREE MONTHS! Up to 3 months free rent on vacant apartments Offer limited to new lessees, for a limited time only FREE TENANT CLUB MEMBERSHIP Open weekdays 12:30 to 8 pm Weekends 11 am to 6 pm 489-7543 CAVENDISH CLUB TOWERS 6595 Mackle Road across from Cavendish Mall.Côte St.Luc Monday-Friday 10- TOWER E: Jeanne-Mae St.OWER F: a etière starting from 3} * laundry roôm « faffilities ET à charged to tagant) Jeanne-Mance entrance PÊCHE SUR GLACE PÊCHE AUX POISSONS DES CHENAUX Location de chalets de pêche; chauffage au bois et à l'huile.Les chalets sont numérotés et le bureau porte le no 23.DESCENTE #3 CENTRE DE PÊCHE des CHENAUX RESIDENTIAL TOWERS 849-1291 SOCIÉTÉ MUNICIPALE | D'HABITATION DE MONTRÉAL am 3] $ pour votre auto $ for your car Achetons et vendons autos usagées, aussi pour ferraille.We buy and sell used cars, also for scrap.933-5350 x 46 PART-TIME CARS ppl ED AUT! DEMANDÉES WANTED PONE Ste-Anne-de-la-Pérade PROP.GAETAN CLOUTIER (418) 325-2142 Ideal for retired person, general office work: typing, invoicing, etc.Call Mr.Pitcher.334-3466.CATERER with experience for serving small parties.325-0829 after 5 ETT ay 5 BOARD CHAMBRE es 32 \u201cFAMILY CARING The licensed home in N.D.G.\u2014 family caring atmosphere, 24-hour supervision \u2014 has vacancy for elderly males and females.Doctor visits.Call 484-3044 JAGUAR 420-1967 Pertect condition.6 cylinder.standard 4 speed plus overdrive, black leather upholstery, 70,000 miles.$9,900.firm.Call 487-7579.CARS FOR SALE AUTOS A VENDRE pm.NURSING HOMES DE SANTE COMPANIONSHIP FOR YOUR LOVED ONES Les Maisonaides Reg'd., the house sitters, now offers experienced care for the elderly.HOURLY AND DAILY RATES FULLY INSURED 489-1302 Building Trades/Société immobilière JA = SERVICE * BRICKWORK * WALLS POINTED ¢ PAINTING OF BRICKWORK 4.BRICKWORK \\ ONKLAND ROOFING ESTABLISHED 1950 TAKE ADVANTAGE OF OUR PROPERTY MAINTENANCE ALL TYPES OF BRICK AND STONE REPAIRS » CEMENT FOUNDATIONS + COMPLETE SHINGLE AND ROOF SERVICE * FULL CHIMNEY SERVICE 5725 Monkland Avenue 486-0665 THOMAS CUSTOM 691-1137 SERVING & THOMAS REG'D.CARPENTRY 935-1297 WORKING TOGETHER WITH THOMAS & JARVIS REG'D.PAINTING AND WALLPAPERING * 626-3293 A FAMILY TRADITION WESTMOUNT SINCE 1920 Over 35 Years Serving Westmounters FINE PAINTING & WOODWORKING All Types of Renovations (FREE ESTIMATES) Mrazik General Contracting Ltd.731-6640 Member Membre DOME SKYLIGHTS Double or triple glazed Supplied and installed by Paintwell Ltd.General Contractor 486-4615 ANDY ANSON RENOVATIONS All indoor renovations, carpentry, plaster, stucco, gyproc, ceramic, paint, etc.Work in Laurentians also.Free estimates, references.G.0.RENOVATIONS 342-9454 WE ALWAYS WASH FIRST * int.& ext.sico paint e Gyproc, plaster, stucco * Wallpaper removal * Spray painting Scaffolding for heights Sash ropes $15 each Insurance work Free estimates, clean work ANDY ANSON 486-4615 LICENSED AND BONDED THE BEST IN PAINTING tor exclusive people WORK GUARANTEED FREE ESTIMATE Mr.NORMAN: 273-8424 PAINTWELL LTD.PROFESSIONAL PAINTING wallpapering * plastering ¢ floor sanding FREE ESTIMATE DENIS: 634-1859 = #, UN 487 BRICKWORK Pointing Cement work Waterproofing Gallery Repairs 24 Hours Service Ceramic tile work vinyl tile work ITED BUILDING SERVICES -3030 DECO MAINTENANCE experts in PAINTING INTERIOR/EXTERIOR WALLPAPERING CARPENTRY Call 465-8608 for free estimate Service Maisons Painting Wall washing, wall papering, wall and floor tiles, wood repair MY WORK IS QUALITY Call PETER 484-0719 The Westmount Examiner, Thursday, January 26, 1984 - 27 ELECTRICAL INSTALLATIONS ALL KINDS ELECTRIC HEATING SPECIALIST FREE ESTIMATES BARELEC INC.367-1230 | Bullaing Services | | Mousenola Services | |: Services immobiliers | Services domestiques i SANDOR REPAIR OF ALL MAKES RENOVATIONS Kitchens, bathrooms, sun decks and balconies, all carpentry and a) A Tl AGENT DEALER WHITE ELNA WESTMOUNT Specialist in Plastering Plastering repairs.We remove wallpaper with steam.30 years\u2019 experience.Call L.Pelletier 659-9440 or 659-1576 after 6 pm GILES REG'D.GENERAL PAINTING AND PREPARATION REPAIRS FREE ESTIMATE 637-5023 SPECIALIZE in cement cracks and foundations, any other cement work.Stucco, retainer wall, brick, pointing, silicone, asphalt.Free estimate.J.Salvati, 489-1693, 489-5998.INTERIOR painting and wallpapering.Top quality work.Very reasonable rates.Phone Bob on 483-5699 or leave message.CARPENTRY; kitchens; playroom; etc.Call Donald Coulombe 632-6362.Residence 363-8279.PAINTING and small repatrs, careful work, reasonable price.References.David 524-4090.painting SELL NEW AND RECONDITIONED REFERENCES A-1 SEWING MACHINE FREE ESTIMATES 3769 Notre-Dame W.932-2098 res Foo 1 | Household Services | Carpet Cleaning | Services domestiques | Special Lo J 29905 with rinse 1 i with rinse.ALL ELECTRIC Month special.HEATING Service Ménager CONVERSION FROM OIL TO Yanick ELECTRIC - AIR, WATER OR 325-9867 BASEBOARD HEATING All 220 volts TREE CUTTING Rewiring and Washing wall installation Painting Free estimate RL s Reasonable price H.L.POEZE Call Phil: ELECTRICAL CONTRACTOR 767-2044 681-6677 BLIND PIANO TUNER REGULATING AND REPAIRS Steel Basement .Window Guards RONALD PELLETIER: 014 up 484-1349 = een] I | | Déménagement et report ! =f Le J SPECIAL MADE UNITS NEW YORK FREE ESTIMATES 695-8667.Toronto, weekly local move, n- sured, Shomer & Shabbos low price.Benjamin Weinberger.276-7298.Household Services Services domestiques TOU EPARGNEZ 25 % SUR TOUS NOS TISSUS REGULIERS JUSQU'À 60% DE RABAIS SUR NOS TISSUS D'AMEUBLEMENT DE MARQUE EN STOCK 3 MOIS sans intérét sur plan budgétaire Lorsque vous aurez constaté le travail que nous accomplissons, vous serez enchantés d'avoir fait rembourrer vos meubles chez nous.estimation gratuite dans un rayon de 50 milles de Montréal * main-d'oeuvre garantie 5 ans par écrit * livraison dans un délai de 5 jours, sur demande ® bas prix imbattables résultant d\u2019un grand pouvoir d'achat Profitez-en pour confier à un spécialiste réputé de longue date le soin de regarnir et recouvrir à neuf tout siège défraichi (chaise, fauteuil, causeuse, canapé, etc.).Rembourrage 10625, rue l'Archevêque, Montréal-Nord Nous avons toujours un represer*ant prés de chez vous = > 327-8108 | $ 28 - The Westmount Examiner, Thursday, January 26, 1984 Cd Moving and Cartage | i Déménagement et transport | L \u2014\u2014\u2014 \u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014 \u2014 \u2014\u2014 \u2014 Moving and Cartage | Déménagement et transport | HELP WANTED PERSONNEL DEMANDÉ 46 Snook's Transfer Van Lines a tradition in moving for over 50 years ANTIQUE SPECIALIST \u201cTHE PROFESSIONALS WHO CARE\" Packing and storage LOCAL & LONG DISTANCE reas.able rates FRI ZSTIMATES 842-4071 842-2371 CLOSED TRUCK Moving, also basement, garage, yard cleaning.Best rate anytime.DEPENDABLE FREE ESTIMATE 24 hours LEO: 365-8432 A bas prix, déménagements entreposage, boites vides, estimée ratuite.Pierre Panneton.iliés.937-9491.Give the gift of life.Be a Red Cross blood donor.Personal Services Services personnels CUSTOM TYPING SERVICE IBM Selectric.Correspondence, financial statements, legal.call 482-7349 PROBLEMS with your accounting and bookkeeping?Need financial statement, tax returns, etc?Get pro advice without paying the price.487-4616.PIANO lessons taught by qualitied music teacher.Reasonable rates.738-6423, 937-5614.DEEP Swedish relaxing massage at your location at your convenience by Antoine, licensed masseur.279-5042.HYPNOTHERAPIST certified in scientific hypnosis, general therapy.Reasonable rate.389-6093.adn 14 LT ve GET A LIFELINE BEFORE THE DEADLINE Tas, T4As, Reléve 4 (real estate tax certificates) Summaries and Supplementaries Agi & Associates 3285 Cavendish #400 DEADLINE: Feb.29/84 LIFELINE 481-0301 \u2014\u2014 \u2014 \u2014 \u2014 = \u2014\u2014 = \u2014 = \u2014 BENTAX PUTS MONEY FOR YOUR TAX REFUND IN YOUR POCKET.FAST.0 Don't wait months for your tax refund.Get money for your federal refund \u2014 less a fee \u2014 in just a few days at BenTax.Benlaxe TAX PREPARATION REFUND BUYING For information: 522-3153 4494-St Denis-Laval- 211-Blvd.-des-Laurentides 4045-Ontario-Est- Longueuil-2150-Chemin Verdun-432-de-l'Église ALL REFUND PURCHASES SUBJECT TO APPROVAL \u2026 MILITIA XZ% THE CANADIAN ARMED FORCES We are part of your community and we want you to learn INFANTRY SKILLS during your time off.Join us on selected nights and weekends for a challenging and rewarding experience.Earn while you learn \u2014with us For more information call 933-9071 or visit the Royal Montreal Regiment, 4625 St.Catherine St.W., Westmount Canada TEMPS PARTIEL Besoin de personnel à temps partiel (quelques heures par jour) pour location de téléviseurs à l'Hôpital Queen Elizabeth.Emploi permanent.Nous désirons des gens capables de travailler de façon autonome et honnête.Les gens à la pré-retraite sont les bienvenus.Salaire à commission.Appeler .332-1506 entre 9h et midi ELECTROLUX CANADA REPRESENTANT(E) avec auto demandé(e), temps plein ou partiel Réussissez avec nous! Désirez-vous $20 et plus de I'heure en moyenne?Si oui: Jean Leboeuf: 691-6430 WORK mae 5) TRAVAIL DEMANDE \u2014 INFIRMIERE avec expérience recherche emploi dans bureau de médecin ou soin à domicile pour personne âgée et malade seulement.279-4641 - 495-8145.EXPERIENCED woman seeks days work.Tuesdays and Saturdays.Also part time in the afternoon.739-1520.DOMESTIC HELP WANTED 53 AIDE DOMESTIQUE DEMANDÉE \u2014\u2014-\u2014\u2014__ RELIABLE cleaning woman.references required.Bi-weekly.935-5958.DOMESTIC HELP WANTED AIDE DOMESTIQUE DEMANDEE 23 COOK HOUSEKEEPER 45 years or over.European food plus laundry, etc.Live in own fuily equipped apartment in beautiful home in Princeton, New Jersey, for family of four, including 2 children ages 6 and 10.Excellent salary for experienced, mature applicant.Non smoker, with recent references.Apply in writing to: Weekly Adservice 155 Hillside Box 715 Westmount H3Z 2Y8 ABLE WOMAN Wanted for light housekeeping and cooking afternoons weekly.Ideal for retired woman or mature student.BABY SITTERS European welcome.Call 487-7246 WANTED GARDIENNES after 4 pm.DEMANDEES 54 ENERGETIC young (or young at heart) woman wanted to babysit 8 month old, in my home, 2 days per week.Snowdon area.References.=% EXPERIENCED and efficient woman seeks 2 days\u2019 cleaning.Call after 6 pm: 842-0506.DOMESTIC WORK WANTED TRAVAIL DOMESTIQUE DEMANDE ru To place a classified ad in THE WEEKLY POST.call 931-7511.DOMESTIC WORK 5 5 TRAVAIL DOMESTIQUE DEMANDE ¢ WANT I CLEANING LADY PROBLEMS?Call Mini Ménage.Our supervised cleaning teams will save you personnel problems and clean your home weekly or alternate weeks at a price you can afford! Call ini Ménage today: 486-4770 NO FÉES CHARGES Re FOR SALE CLOTHING & FURS À VENDRE 59 VETEMENTS & FOURRURES BARGAIN Man's down coat, size 44, length 42 inches, $75.Appointment only.933-9211.UNUSED beaver fur coat for $350., crippled since 1979, could not use fur coat worth $1100.933-9932.LINED black suede coat with lamb wool trim, practically new.size 10, $150.931-0044.VENTES 65 NEW TIRES BARGAIN Michelin, Pirelli, Goodrich T/A, Uniroyal Goodyear 364-3611 = 6 GENERAL _\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014 PNEUS USAGÉS Choix de grandeurs Autos et camionnettes MULTI-PNEUS 60 rue Richmond 364-3149 ELECTRIC WHEELCHAIRS * NEW, COMPLETE WITH BATTERY AND CHARGER $1,500 » GUARANTEED 1 YEAR MEDI-PLUS 342-5275 SALES IF YOU OWN IT VALUE IT Courtesy verbal appraisals of your jewellery on the spot.PETIT COIN DORE CLOSED MONDAYS 738-1670 YVETTE STEPHENS LIQUIDATOR Kerman rug, beige background, garden design, 19 x 12, semi antique, $6,500.; Chinese porcelain vase, 15 inch diameter, celadon glaze on dark blue ground with medallions, $1,500.; Tabriz rug, red background, 9 x 12, $1.200.; Birks sterling tea and coffee set, 5 pieces with tray, $3,000.; white bureau, $150.; half moon console table, mahogany, $250.Call 342-3553 and 739-9448.HAVE you arts.crafts, whatnots to sell?Tables renting for Valentine's Day Bazaar sponsored by Con- naught Nursery School, St.Philip's Church, February 11th.Call 481-5044, 10 to 11 am.488-8574, 2 to 3 pm.FOR sale, 2 pairs downhill skis, Hex- cel and Volk! 175.One Caber boots, size 7 and poles.Brand new equipment $200.737-0315.2 speakers Accusound AS330, 30 watts.R.M.S.22 x 12 x 10 inches, walnut finish, $125.Call 937-1716 after 6 pm.HOUSEHOLD appliances, furniture, decorative items, and fire family clothing for sale.Call 989-9444.0 The Westmount Examiner, ECL i I January 26, 1984 - \u2014_\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014 FOR SALE: GENERAL ANTIQUES | | A VENDRE: GENERAL ANTIQUITES EDUCATIF EDUCATIF LE ROI DE : Pi ly SPANISH LA PETITE ANTIQU ITES AYDEL MCGILL graduate student willing to CONVE RSATION tutor high school level math, MACHINE Import European Furniture Shams.blog and physics Cal FOR ADULTS Direct method 5900 St-Jacques W.x LOUIS XIII TABLE MACKAY CENTRE $350 Also European Armoires, Buffets, etc.etc.SIGN LANGUAGE 60 hours (3 months) BIG DISCOUNT 18th & 19th Century Mackay Centre will be of- 4 students minimum o fering sien language tot ic thi i ç e n length of stock cal: 843-8893 or 277-7228 a OPUS IC IIS 8 students maximum # 6 SNOW BLOWERS Courses wil be given in night course designed List Price Discount ifferent levels, times, and taught by a team days and duration.: $1,700 WE BUY PTE 13 Classes will begin the of professional South $1,000 $100 to $150 poils fcant arints, EDUCATE week of February 13.American teachers $900 oriental rugs, clocks, Cost: 20-hour course $50 Doulton, Hummels Textbook $17 482-681 1 lete estat TRADITIONAL on wi SALES\u2014SERVICE also complete estates Registration will be held at Servi | machi GUY ANTIQUES OIL PAINTING MACKAY CENTRE ervice on all machines TECHNIQUE COURSE 3500 Decarie Blvd.Chain-saws\u2014Snow Blowers 2325 Guy JECHNIQ bilingual Wednesday, February 1 HOMEDAYCARE Tillers\u2014Lawnmowers\u2014etc.CORNER SHERBROOKE ; g Thursday, February 2 Experienced teacher course starting Feb- from 4 to 8 pm 482-6212 Call 935-3600 ruary.Atwater loca- Payment for course and N.D.G.area tion.Highly qualified textbook is at registra- Beginning February 1 EDUCATIONAL : tion.$50 ki - For further information weekly \u2019 ÉDUCATIF please phone a | 3 EXPERIENCED lady teacher ; MACKAY CENTRE Call 488-0278 holding degree from McGill has a maths, sciences and English com between 6 and 11 pm , rind o some pare ur prehension/expression.Tel.Rioj at 482-0500 A n t i q u ¢ g rates.Call 486-5673.PERSONALS EDUCATIONAL MA WILL VIDEOTAPE YOUR COMPLETE HOUSEHOLD FOR À EDUCATIF CONFIDENTIAL INSURANCE EVALUATION PURPOSES.Call us for information and estimates.WHAT IS THE | We also repair and restore your treasures.y hr MONT RE Nel B Open daily from 9 am-6 pm, Sunday 1-5 pm P rt t 84 i 7 GRAND BLVD., ILE PERROT O es ou ver es Recorded 453-3564 AU COLLEGE JEAN-DE-BREBEUF weskends & ach i evening to talk to msn on 73 LE JEUDI 2 FEVRIER wow ANTIQUE _oak buffet, $250, EDUCATIF de 13h00 à 17h00 9 AM PM rere pay, Ue Bed 520, MUSIC de 19h00 à 21h00 495-1853 POOL heater, \u201cPowermatic\u201d used 3 INSTRUCTION , : Ria PT TEE en pop oso Home lessons 5625 Decelles, Montreal Y nics or\u201d 1 Cine arose S100 SE Da er Gagieggional teacher.Cal (514) 342-1320, poste 205 PH READING BY ! ANTIQUES 68 UN RENDEZ-VOUS AUX ELEVES DE SECONDAIRE V ANTIQUITÉS NAD 1A SPIRITUALIST | MAISON D'ENSEIGNEMENT CARD, PALM, CAMLEN ANTIQUES \u2014_\u2014 a SAND READING A GREAT SELECTION OF ANTIQUE til Al regdinés contiden FURNITURE FOR EVERY TASTE \u2014 340-1420 from 9 am lo 9 Refinished Country Pine Furniture at: 69 Westminster North Collège Marie de France STRESS & RELAXATION Montreal West , , WITH DAYAL KAUR KHALSA LYCEE FRANCAIS DE MONTREAL re i * Dining tables and chairs.* Armoires.cise, meditation, how to sleep, » Dressers and blanket boxes 2 ,Ç , ; what to eat.Lunch incl.and lots more.Inscriptions pour l'année scolaire 1984-85 Sat Feb.! lor Feb 25 ; : 10 am-4 pm Beautiful walnut and mahogany pieces at: au 4635, chemin Queen Mary caLL 484-0412 6121 Sherbrooke West, N.D.G.737-1177 10 REGISTER ° Mahoga ny secretary desks.of drawers.' ei WISH TO ° Moa inlaid armoire.Examens d admission ; ENTERTAIN?» Oak bookcase and more.pour le secondaire et le collégial TOO BUSY TO COOK?Come in soon, great furniture, great deal.le samedi 28 janvier Experienced Cordon Bleu trames cheon parties in your home.Also takes, catering.486-8807 Admissions sur dossier à l'élémentaire ol Moira: nues ee _ : 457-3946 30 - The Westmount Examiner, Thursday, January 26, 1984 Skate-a-thon here Saturday The annual Scout Skate-a-thon will be held Saturday afternoon 14 FATSOES! We are a bunch of happy ex-fatsoes.Finally, and once and for all, divorced from the unwanted pound and swing it to the unlimited health program, Join us\u2014 Call 384-7020, Loc.96 PERSONALS SISTER ANGELINA Card and palm reading.Advice on all problems such as love, business, marriage, etc.Call 495-1970 cu 11 WANTED: OLD ORIENTAL RUGS any size or condition Ararat Rug 288-1218 RAMASSONS meubles, bibelots, vaisselle, linge et autres.Rendezvous du Pauvre.Jour 525-1527, soir 526-1907.ART We are interested in purchasing paintings of well-known Canadian artists.Please call 933-4406 OPEN SUNDAYS Galerie de Bellefeuille 1212 Greene Avenue Westmount WANTED DOMESTIC | ANIMAUX DOMESTIQUES DOBILINE KENNEL REG'D Free pickup and delivery BOARDING FOR CATS and DOGS 457-5051 LOST PERDU _\u2014z\u2014z\u2014_\u2014_\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014 LOST: gold wedding ring, inscribed, vicinity Aberdeen south of The Boulevard.Reward.Call 341-4140.3 3 LOST PERDU LOST set of keys attached to red at the Westmount arena.The fund-raising event for research in children\u2019s diseases and also Scouting activities involves more than 200 skaters and collects about $12,000.\u201cScouting is proud to operate this worthwhile community service,\u201d according to Sharon Dauphinee, 3789 The Boulevard, president of the Westmount Scout Council.Registering at the rink begins at 1:45 pm.All skaters should be on hand with their pledge cards 30 minutes before their scheduled start in order to register.Registration will close 5 minutes before each round commences.To control traffic it is suggested that each Scouting group follow this schedule for the 50-minute skating periods: 2:30 \u2014 1st West- mount (Roslyn School); 3:30 \u2014 2nd Westmount (Dominion-Douglas) and Westmount Park; 4:30 \u2014 St.Leo's and St.Matthias; 5:30 \u2014 St.Andrew's and Shaar Hashomayim; 6:45 \u2014 skiers and fast skaters.It is important to note that no skaters can join a round once it has started.Doughnuts and soft drinks will be given to all skaters and many prizes donated by local merchants and friends of Scouting will be awarded.Parents are asked to help in the counting of the rounds while they enjoy the fun at the arena on Saturday.Less interest than expected in philately It looks as if Westmount\u2019s attempt to start a new stamp club may be a dead letter.Parks and recreation superintendent John Garland told THE WESTMOUNT EXAMINER he has received only one inquiry about the idea, and he may soon have to let the idea drop.\u201cWe've given it a good try,\u201d said Mr.Garland.\u201cWe're going to give this another week or so and then I have to release the night (reserved) at Victoria Hall.\u201d The idea for the club was proposed to the city last month by Julian Giorgi, a former vice- president of the Westmount Philatelic Club.Spurred by the success of the chess club, Mr.Garland got permission from city council to obtain a room in Victoria Hall for the proposed club to use for free.The condition for the club to use the room was that there be sufficient response by the public to the idea.The city publicized the club by sending notices to local schools and advertising it on bulletin boards in city buildings.What Mr.Garland did not originally know was the West- mount Philatelic Club, though no longer in Westmount, is still operating from a location in downtown Montreal.In addition, Spring plans for recreation Westmount may still be in the cold of winter, but the city's recreation and parks department is already thinking of things to do in the spring and summer.The city will hold its regular Family Day on Saturday, May 26 from 10 am to 4 pm.Westmount Park will be the sight of the huge.picnic, complete with pony rides, displays and concerts.Another celebration will be held for Canada Day, with events centering around the city pool.The exact date will be decided later.For those interested in sports, the city's program will include soccer and softball leagues for boys and girls, swimming instruction, tennis instruction and tournaments and baseball instruction.Westmount and Prince Albert Parks will be the location for summer playground program, where children from six to 14 can join in a program of arts and crafts, sports and tours.Finally, those more inclined to gardening or watercolor painting can try their hand in the city's courses.Registering for these spring courses will begin in March.there is a junior stamp club being run by the Westmount library.Mr.Garland thinks the combination of these may already serve Westmount stamp enthusiasts of most ages.He plans to make a final decision on the matter next week.Swiss Army knife on St.Catherine Street.Classified ads offer service specialists If you offer services, it's the place people look\u2014so make sure your name is there.Phone Classified ads are merchandise movers That's right! Move no-longer- used items out of storage areas in return for extra cash.Classified ads are people movers They move people into homes and apartments, into new neighborhoods.They move people to better jobs.SELL with classified ads! publi-hebdo | weekly adservice 931-7511 \u201cWe'll write the ad\u201d Every week people continue to put Classified Ads in MC SE ENR IV CNV Examiner Proof they sell and sell! HOCKEY STANDINGS Following are the standings in the Westmount municipal hockey leagues as of Tuesday morning.GP W LDF APs NOVICE Bears 9 6 3 039 2112 Dragons 9 6 3 037 24 12 Knights 9 4 5 02038 8 Guards 9 2 7 02639 4 ATOM Canucks 9 6 3 0 43 38 12 Islanders 9 5 4 038 34 10 Penguins 9 3 5 14037 7 Nordiques 9 3 5 13436 7 PEE WEE 1 Bulls 9 7 1 1362315 Mules 9 4 4 13222 9 Broncs 9 2 4 3 24 41 7 Huskies 9 2 6 13037 5 PEE WEE 11 Capitals 9 6 3 057 4112 Scouts 9 4 5 040 37 8 Kings 9 4 5 03345 8 Seals 9 4503239 8 BANTAM Flames 16 12 3 1 78 43 25 Bruins 16 11 5 0 78 50 22 Leafs 16 5 11 0 59 84 10 Rangers 16 3 12 1 44 81 7 MIDGET Mustangs 11 7 3 1 37 28 14 Hornets 10 6 2 2 39 33 14 Badgers 11 0 8 5 27 42 3 JUVENILE-SENIOR \u2018B\u2019 Fathers 12 8 3 1 61 46 17 Aces 12 6 4 251 49 14 Oilers 13 5 5 3505013 Flyers 11 3 6 2 4251 8 Jets 12 3 7 25361 8 SENIOR Wanderers 14 12 1 1 87 20 25 Stars 15 10 4 1 80 40 21 Bruins 14 7 7 047 54 14 Sabres 15 4 10 13977 9 Flames 14 112 117 81 3 ALL STAR Atom 3 1 2 0 814 2 Peewee 14 9 5 0118 49 18 Bantam 2 0 2 0 4 80 EXHIBITION Old Timers 9 5 3 146 38 11 HOCKEY SCORES Following are the scores for the Westmount municipal hockey leagues for the week ending Tuesday, Jan.24: NOVICE Jan.21: Knights 2, Dragons 0 Bears 9, Guards 4 ATOM Jan.21: Canucks 7, Islanders 4 Penguins 3, Nordiques 3 PEE WEE 1 Jan.23: Bulls 3, Huskies 2 Mules 4, Broncs 0 PEE WEE II Jan.18: Capitals 8, Scouts 6 Kings 6, Seals 1 BANTAM Jan.17: Bruins 5, Flames 2 Leafs 6, Rangers 2 Jan.19: Bruins 5, Leafs 4 Flames 6, Rangers 0 MIDGET Jan.19: Mustangs 5, Badgers 0 JUVENILE-SENIOR \u201cB\u201d Jan.18: Fathers 5, Oilers 0 Jan.19: Jets 8, Aces 3 Jan.23: Oilers 6, Flyers 1 SENIOR Jan.17: Stars 6, Sabres 4 Wanderers 5, Flames | Jan.19: Flames 5, Sabres 2 Stars 9, Bruins 6 ATOM ALL STARS Jan.18: LaSalle 5.Westmount 0 BANTAM ALL STARS Jan.18: Chateauguay 5.Westmount 2 PEE WEE ALL STARS Jan.21: Westmount 12, Longueuil 4 OLD TIMERS Jan.23: Avon 5, Westmount 2 © @ LE CLUB VIDEO WESTMOUNT.THE JVCs ARE HERE! Purchase a JVC and you are a member of our Gold Card Club: ® permanent membership ® 52 free movies 345 Victoria 481-7910 SPORTS and RECREATION Thursday, January 26, 1984 - 31 SERVICE D'AUTO WESTMOUNT AUTO SERVICE SPECIALISTS: TUNE-UP + ALLEN DIAGNOSTIC BRAKES ¢ FULL SERVICE TIRES AND BALANCING 4780 Sherbrooke St.W.CORNER GROSVENOR 933-8556 » 932-1554 Oilers lose, win one in senior \u2018B\u2019 hockey By GARY ROUSE This week's hockey round-up features Westmount\u2019s senior \u2018B\u201d hockey league, and takes a look at the past three games played.The first gam: saw the first place Fathers score three second- period goals and go on to down the Oilers by a score of 5 - 0.Alex Bernstein led the way for the Fathers, scoring twice and adding an assist.Tony Boeckh, Ron Blumer, and Kar! Fisher added singles, while goaltender Dave Wood picked up the shutout.The next night saw the Jets take on the Aces.Powered by five third-period goals, the Jets broke a 3-3tie and went on to win 8 3.Kevin Cripps and John Kazenel led the way for the Jets as they each had two goals and an assist.Mark Blostein, Serge Ferrand, Trifon Tsartsaros, and Alex Hugessen each picked up a goal.Scoring for the Aces were Aaron Poteet, Jim McCallum and Robert O'Neil.In the final game, the Oilers made up for their 5 - 0 loss to the Fathers by beating the Flyers 6 - 1.The Oilers were led by D.J.Reynolds, who had three goals and an assist on the night.The Oilers broke the game open in the second period by scoring three goals, taking them to a 4 - 0 lead, before Michael Whitworth got the Flyers on the board late in the period.Other Oiler goal scorers were Mike O'Neill, Stephen Adams, and Peter Ramsay, while defenceman Paul Perrier picked up two assists and Doug Waterston collected three.THE WESTMOUNT EXAMINER'S comprehensive classified advertising section each week is laden with bargains and opportunities.The little ads bring big results.To place your ad simply call 931-7511.A DEPENDABLE NAME SINCE 1937 MONTREAL LTD LOW COST DAILY RENTAL DAILY \u2014 WEEKLY \u2014 WEEKEND SPECIALS LONG TERM LEASING All models include service, insurance, license, snow tires, replacement car.We will purchase your present car.489-4994 LONG TERM 489-6885 DAILY RENTAL Conveniently located at 5333 St.James West at Decarie We fully maintain our cars during the lease se we always have exceptional used cars for sale.See our large display at the above location.Ice rink closed Saturday Westmount skaters should note the city arena\u2019s hockey rink will not be available this Saturday between 2 pm and 8 pm.Parks and recreation superintendent John Garland says the rink will be in use by the Westmount District, Boy Scouts of Canada for their annual Skate-a-thon.The arena\u2019s small rink will be available for general skating.SHIDOKAN ACADEMY 40 YEARS ESTABLISHED MARTIAL ARTS SCHOOL NOW OFFERING SELF-DEFENSE COURSE BODY TONING, DEFENSE METHODS AND APPLICATIONS INSTRUCTOR: Y.SAKURAI (Sth Dan) STARTING JANUARY 19 REGISTRATION OPEN TILL END OF JANUARY Tuesday/Thursday 5:45-6:45\u2014women only 6:45-7:45\u2014mixed $85\u20143-month course KARATE CLASSES FOR HIGH SCHOOL STUDENTS Tuesday and Thursday 4:30-5:30 CHILDREN'S CLASSES (8 to 13) Monday and Wednesday 4:30 to 5:30 5345 de Maisonneuve West, Metro Vendôme Information: 481-6684 after 2 pm Young hockey players shine in older leagues Some days just everything goes right, as it did for two young Westmount hockey players Saturday.Seven-year-old Blair Pattee, of 494 Lansdowne avenue, normally plays for the Bears in the city's novice level hockey league, but Saturday he got a chance to move up a bit.\u201cWe were short players in the atom league (for nine- and ten- year-olds), and he was asked to fill in, says parks and recreation superintendent John Garland.Fill in he did.Blair scored four goals and got two assists as the team he was helping out, the Canucks, beat the Islanders 7-4.At the same time, Jean Sebas- tien, 613 Cote St.Antoine road, helped the Westmount peewee All-Stars defeat Longueuil 12-4 by scoring four goals and getting six assists.A veteran at 12 years old, Jean Sebastien plays for the Leafs in the bantam league, even though he should be playing in the younger peewee league.\u201cHe was so strong for peewee we had to move him up to bantam,\u201d says Mr.Garland.\u201cHe's probably the fastest skater we've had around here for years.\u201d DEALER IN CANADA Say.a 7 Hector Sigoui n| Normand Dumouchel André Laporte To commemorate the nomination of Auto Élégante as the top Canadian contributor to Jaguar'e 1983 record sales year, Mr.Hector Sigouin, regional manager for Jaguar Canada Inc., presents André Laporte, owner, and Normand Dumouchel, sales manager, with a photograph of the two Jaguar drivers who won the six-hour endurance race at Mosport last August.The management and staff of Automobile Elégante wish to thank you, our customers, for your invaluable part in helping us win the distinction as Canada\u2019s Jaguar Dealer-of-the-Year for 1983.We are honored by your confidence in our products and after-sale service, and we assure you we're doing out utmost to serve you even better in future.We also thank everyone who visited the Jaguar exhibit at the Salon de I'Auto, If we could not find the time to answer all your questions then, please come and see us in our showroom at 4747 Jean- Talon East and we'll be happy to present the Jaguar line of fine cars.Aonmobiles Only 5 minutes from l'Aca At Automobile Élégante the customer is kingl JAGUAR/Saag DEALER le 4747 Jean-Talon East J Montreal 374-6550 Showroom open Monday to Friday from 9 am to 9 pm die Circle 32 - Thursday, January 26, 1984 Detector gone when needed Fire officials are investigating the removal of a smoke detector from the ceiling in an apartment at 201 Metcalfe avenue where smoke from burnt food last Thursday was noticed by a neighbor.On arrival, shortly after 11:43 pm, firefighters found \u201ca lot of smoke\u201d in the hallway of the seventh floor and an ejector was used to ventilate it.The occupant of the apartment apparently put some food on the stove and went to sleep, fire officials said, adding it was not the first time this had happened.The smoke detector was off the ceiling and not working, they said.Public safety officials, also at the scene, reported the device was found on the counter in the bathroom.LaSalle smoke causes alarm Firemen were called to Victoria and Somerville avenues Sunday night for a smell of smoke.After investigating the area, it was believed the smell came from \u201clarge clouds\u201d of smoke to the west, visible from Burton and Claremont avenues, in the area of LaSalle, possibly from a fire there.metro LS GU DUT Many join Scouting skaters The general committee of city council has endorsed Saturday's 8th annual Skate-a-thon at the West- mount arena, Mayor Brian Gallery reports.Richard French, West- mount\u2019's MNA, who last year raised $1,000 with his participation, will again be one of the participants.Sgt.Robert Cotnoir, who heads the youth squad at MUC police station 23, plans to skate with more than 45 pledges collected from many personnel and this year plans to bring his daughter to skate as well.Fireman Wally Schmidt, who has skated on behalf of the Westmount Fire Brigade in previous years, is also expected to attend the event, organized by Westmount Scouting groups.Col.Geddry at Rotary speaks on Forces here The Canadian Armed Forces presence in Montreal was the subject of discussion at the meeting of the Westmount Rotary Club Wednesday last week.Col.Albert Geddry, commander of the Canadian Armed Forces\u201d Montreal base, told the Rotarians just how extensive the forces\u2019 ground presence is in the area.Col.Geddry commands four garrisons in the area: Farnham, Maisonneuve, Longue Pointe and Nicolet.With these, plus various other administrative and militia units within a 200-kilometre radius around Montreal, Col.Ged- dry is responsible for about 15,000 military and civilian employees.\u201cThey don't all belong to me, but [ wipe their noses,\u201d he said.Though six years of working at the department of national defence headquarters in Ottawa made Col.Geddry used to red tape, he still gets frustrated when having to allocate his $250,000 budget.\u2018\u2018l've got 25 percent to manoeuvre and play with,\u201d he said, noting the money is quickly used up just paying for routine things like maintenance.\u201cI ask myself, \u2018where\u2019s this discretion I have?\u2019 It\u2019s just patching holes.\u201d With 735 buildings located on 10,600 acres of land which the department of national defence owns around Montreal, there can be a lot of holes to patch.Still, Col.Geddry pointed out the ANTIQUE CLOCKS REPAIRED AND BOUGHT FREEQQIM PA AR Aaron gt\u201d + 488-3017 valuable function each base plays in Canada's military.Maisonneuve, located in St.Hubert, is probably the main land force base in the country, complete with seven generals housed there.\u201cIn theory, they're tenants, but when the general says \u2018I'd like something,\u201d it happens.\u201d joked Col.Geddry.Longue Pointe functions much as a military hotel, as it can accommodate 1600 people at once in its quarters.At various times, it has also served to house refugees from Vietnam and Uganda and guests for the Montreal Olympics.The remaining bases, Farnham and Nicolet, function as a recruit training base and a weapons testing base, respectively.Col.Geddry was introduced by Doug Whiting and was thanked by Frank Kenwood.The meeting had two visiting Rotarians from the Montreal-Lakeshore club and one from the Montreal West club.We not only repair Col.Albert Geddry chipped glassware, and make them usable again, but we also restring pearls and beads, repair broken jewellery and china.Remember\u2014all your evaluation and restoration needs, under one roof.Appraisal, Liquidation and Restoration Centre 368 Victoria Avenue, Westmount Monday-Friday Saturday 487-4898 METRO SUPERMARKET offers downstairs at Westmount Square Greene and St.Catherine Street with minimum $25 purchase (entrance on St.Catherine Street) and outside parking lot on the corner of (entrance on St.Catherine Street) DON'T FORGET! WE ALSO HAVE DELIVERY SERVICE SIX DAYS A WEEK \u2014 $2.75 DELIVERY CHARGE Member International Society of Appraisers Do you know that for your shopping convenience, "]
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